WARM WISHES™ – apricot-pink hybrid tea rose - Fryer
Imagine stepping onto your veranda after a blustery coastal walk, the breeze softened by a living windbreak of glowing blooms, where the warm, peach-pink colour of WARM WISHES™ lifts the mood in any weather. This upright hybrid tea holds its shape neatly in smaller borders and large containers, rewarding you with XL, exhibition-style flowers that keep returning from early summer well into autumn for a luxuriously long season. Raised in Britain and proven in testing trial grounds, it offers dependable garden performance with only moderate routine care, ideal where gales and showers meet bright sun and shifting coastal conditions. Planted as a robust own-root shrub, it establishes for the long term, steadily extending its underground framework in year one, building confident top growth in year two and by year three delivering its full ornamental impact with waves of rich, fruity fragrance from every flush.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small coastal front garden bed |
The upright, medium-height habit fits neatly into narrow strips by a path or drive, giving structure without overwhelming the space. Its British breeding and trial success suggest reliable garden performance for exposed, breezy sites, ideal for the busy coastal homeowner seeking easy-care impact. |
| Large container on a sunny veranda |
Planted in a stable 40–50 litre container with free-draining compost, this hybrid tea forms a strong, permanent framework and repeats generously, giving you exhibition-style blooms right by your seating area. Own-root growth supports long-term pot culture, suiting veranda gardeners who value lasting display. |
| Feature rose near seating for evening tea |
The XL, high-centred blooms and strong, long-lasting fruity scent make this rose ideal beside a favourite chair, where each flush can be appreciated up close. Regular deadheading keeps flowers coming, rewarding minimal attention for those wanting relaxing fragrance. |
| Mixed border with ornamental grasses |
Warm peach-pink flowers combine beautifully with airy grasses and perennials, echoing soft sunset tones over shingle. Its moderate foliage density lets companions such as Panicum and Salvia weave through, creating movement appreciated by gardeners who enjoy textured plantings. |
| Cutting patch for home-arranged bouquets |
Originally selected as a cut-flower exhibition hybrid tea, it produces long, straight stems carrying solitary, high-centred blooms that open slowly and fade gracefully. This makes it an excellent garden source for vases, ideal for home florists wanting elegant stems. |
| Family garden focal point planting |
As a single specimen at 90 cm spacing, it forms a tidy, upright shrub that children and adults can enjoy without it dominating the border. Occasional health checks and light pruning are usually sufficient, which appeals to households preferring low-fuss beauty. |
| Sheltered coastal rose-and-lavender strip |
In a well-drained strip with good sun and shelter, it pairs well with Lavandula and sea kale, echoing the feel of a refined shingle garden while coping steadily with brisk onshore winds and salt-laden air, a reassuring choice for coastal-style lovers seeking reliable structure. |
| Long-season rose border in clay soil |
Once established, its good heat tolerance and remontant flowering provide colour from early summer to autumn. In heavier clay, thoughtful preparation improves drainage while the own-root system anchors securely and builds resilience over time, attractive to gardeners planning long-term planting. |
Styling ideas
- Sunset Veranda Trio – combine WARM WISHES™ with lavender and dwarf sea kale in a 50 litre pot for a soft, coastal palette – ideal for veranda owners who enjoy evening tea outdoors.
- Peach-and-Blue Border – plant with Salvia nemorosa and Penstemon ‘Husker Red’ for contrast between warm blooms and cool blues – suited to gardeners wanting an elegant but easy summer display.
- Shingle Romance – dot this rose through a light gravel or shingle bed with Festuca and small boulders for a refined beach-garden feel – perfect for coastal-style enthusiasts with limited space.
- Fragrant Welcome – place two plants flanking a front path, underplanted with low thyme, to greet guests with colour and scent – attractive to homeowners who prefer simple, high-impact planting.
- Cutting Corner – dedicate a sunny square of the garden to several bushes in rows, giving a steady supply of long-stemmed blooms – appealing to hobby florists who like arranging their own roses.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose; registered as FRYxotic, marketed as Warm Wishes™ Hybrid tea rose FRYxotic; ARS exhibition name Sunset Celebration™; part of the hybrid tea rose commercial group. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Gareth Fryer, Fryer’s Roses Ltd, UK, in 1993 from Pot O' Gold × (unknown seedling × Cheshire Life); introduced commercially after 1995 via Weeks Wholesale Rose Grower, Inc. in the USA. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated hybrid tea: multiple gold and silver medals in Belgium, Italy and Belfast during the 1990s, plus RNRS Trial Ground Certificate and RHS Award of Garden Merit in the United Kingdom in 2002. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy hybrid tea 100–140 cm tall and 50–90 cm wide, with moderately dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickliness; spent blooms benefit from removal to maintain continuous flowering. |
| Flower morphology |
Exhibition-type, XL-sized, double flowers with 26–39 petals, high-centred and pointed buds on mainly solitary stems; strongly remontant with abundant second flush, particularly suitable for cutting and specimen display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Warm peach to salmon-pink blend with subtle shading, from deep peach-orange buds to bright peach-pink flowers that gradually fade to pastel peach and cream; moderate colour retention, best in cooler, not scorching, conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, rich fruity fragrance that is long-lasting on the bush and in the vase; primarily ornamental with double flowers that limit pollinator access, so chosen more for human enjoyment than for wildlife value. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasionally forms small, ovoid, orange-red hips around 10–14 mm in diameter; hips are not usually a dominant ornamental feature and may be reduced further by regular deadheading for more repeat flowering. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated to approximately –21 to –18 °C, RHS H7, USDA zone 6b, Swedish zone 3; tolerates heat well with regular watering; disease resistance moderate, so occasional preventive care may be helpful in damp seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny, well-drained soil, including improved clay; spacing 60 cm for masses, 50 cm for low hedging, 90 cm for specimens; suitable for borders, feature planting, containers and home cutting gardens. |
WARM WISHES™ Hybrid tea rose FRYxotic offers richly scented, exhibition-style blooms, compact structure for smaller spaces and the long-term reliability of an own-root shrub, making it a thoughtful choice for your next garden planting.