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Freshly Potted*

Rose 'Pink Perpetue' (Climbing)

Climbing Rose

£13.99
34955
31 item(s)
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At a Glance

Rose Pink Perpetue - Climbing Rose

A vigorous modern climber with exceptional repeat flowering and reliability

 

Overview

Rose Pink Perpetue is an outstanding climbing rose that delivers exceptional garden performance with minimal fuss, making it perfect for everyday gardeners seeking reliable results. Bred in France in 1965, this modern climber has earned a reputation for vigorous growth, continuous flowering, and remarkable disease resistance. The cheerful pink blooms with contrasting white centres create a distinctive two-tone effect that brightens any garden space throughout the growing season.

 

Key Features

Flower Characteristics:

  • Medium-sized, semi-double blooms (7-8cm diameter) in vibrant clusters

  • Distinctive deep pink petals with crisp white centres and golden stamens

  • Light, fresh fragrance with subtle rose and honey notes

  • Exceptional repeat flowering from early summer through to first frost

  • Weather-resistant flowers maintain quality in typical British conditions

 

Growth Habit:

  • Vigorous climbing growth reaching 3-4 metres in height

  • Strong, upright stems with excellent branching structure

  • Dense, glossy dark green foliage provides perfect backdrop

  • Outstanding disease resistance to black spot, rust, and mildew

  • Excellent cold hardiness and adaptability to various growing conditions

 

Planting Requirements

Position: Performs excellently in full sun to partial shade (minimum 6 hours direct sunlight for optimal flowering)

Soil: Thrives in well-draining, fertile soil enriched with organic matter, pH 6.0-7.5

Spacing: Allow 2.5-3 metres between plants for good air circulation and full development

Support: Requires sturdy support structure such as strong trellis, pergola, or substantial fence framework

 

Care Instructions

Planting

Plant bare-root roses between November and March during dormancy, or container plants throughout the growing season. Prepare generous planting hole with well-rotted compost and ensure excellent drainage.

 

Watering

Water regularly during establishment and dry periods. Apply water at soil level to prevent leaf diseases. Once established, shows good drought tolerance but benefits from supplemental watering.

 

Feeding

Feed with balanced rose fertiliser in early spring, followed by potash-rich feed in midsummer to promote continuous flowering and strengthen plants for winter.

 

Pruning

Prune in late winter, removing dead, diseased, or weak growth. Train main stems horizontally where possible to encourage flowering shoots along entire length.

 

Seasonal Performance

Spring: Vigorous new growth emerges with first flush of buds forming by late May

Summer: Continuous heavy flowering with particularly impressive displays in warm weather

Autumn: Sustained flowering with enhanced colour contrast in cooler temperatures

Winter: Strong, attractive framework provides good structural interest in dormant garden

 

Garden Applications

  • Boundary Walls: Excellent coverage for house walls or garden boundaries

  • Pergolas and Arches: Creates stunning overhead displays with continuous colour

  • Mixed Borders: Provides reliable backdrop for herbaceous and shrub plantings

  • Screening: Effective coverage for unsightly structures or boundaries

  • Cottage Gardens: Modern reliability with traditional climbing rose appeal

  • Low-Maintenance Gardens: Perfect for busy gardeners seeking guaranteed results

 

Growing Tips for Success

  • Apply organic mulch around base to conserve moisture and suppress weeds

  • Deadhead regularly to maintain continuous flowering throughout season

  • Train new growth regularly during growing season for optimal coverage

  • Excellent companion for white or purple flowering plants

  • Consider underplanting with spring bulbs for extended seasonal interest

 

Hardiness and Maintenance

Hardiness: Fully hardy throughout UK conditions (RHS H5)

Maintenance Level: Very low - exceptional disease resistance minimises care requirements

Disease Resistance: Outstanding natural resistance to all major rose diseases

Weather Tolerance: Excellent performance in changeable British weather conditions

Vigour Rating: Strong and reliable without becoming unmanageable

Longevity: Long-lived variety providing decades of consistent garden performance

 

Modern Breeding Advantages

As a modern climbing rose, Pink Perpetue benefits from:

  • Advanced disease resistance bred into the variety

  • Improved continuous flowering habit

  • Enhanced weather tolerance and flower durability

  • Reduced maintenance requirements compared to older varieties

  • Consistent performance across different soil types and conditions

 

Special Garden Value

This variety is particularly valued for:

  • Distinctive two-tone flower colouring that stands out in the garden

  • Exceptional reliability and consistent performance

  • Strong vigour without becoming overly rampant

  • Excellent disease resistance reducing need for chemical treatments

  • Long flowering season providing months of garden colour

 

Companion Planting Suggestions

Pink Perpetue combines beautifully with:

  • White flowering shrubs like philadelphus or deutzia

  • Purple perennials such as lavender or catmint

  • Silver-leaved plants like artemisia or lamb's ear

  • Blue flowering climbers like clematis for extended interest

 

Perfect For

Rose Pink Perpetue is ideally suited for gardeners seeking a reliable, vigorous climbing rose that delivers consistent results without demanding specialist knowledge or intensive care. Perfect for busy gardeners, those new to rose growing, or anyone wanting a climbing rose that simply gets on with the job of flowering abundantly. The combination of disease resistance, continuous flowering, and manageable vigour makes this variety particularly suitable for modern gardens where low-maintenance, high-impact plants are valued.

Especially recommended for:

  • Gardeners seeking reliable, disease-resistant climbing roses

  • Busy homeowners wanting low-maintenance garden features

  • Those preferring continuous colour over single spectacular displays

  • Anyone seeking proven garden performance with minimal intervention

Reasons to Buy Roses from Jacksons Nurseries

(1) ‘Excellent’ on Trustpilot

Buy with confidence from the only online rose grower rated ‘Excellent’ 4.9* on Trustpilot. We have been a trusted supplier of roses for 3 generations. We take pride in growing our own roses in the field before potting them up, allowing for meticulous quality control to sale.

 

Trustpilot Excellent

 

(2) Best Prices Guaranteed – Direct from the Grower

Save £££s by buying direct from a grower you can trust. We’ve already price checked all of our roses against competitors so you don’t have to. We are so confident we offer the best value, if you find a rose of the same type and grade elsewhere, we’ll beat it by 10%.

 

Price Promise

(3) 12 Month Plants Guarantee

We offer a 12 month guarantee on every plant that you buy from us that we have classified as Fully Hardy. If a plant you've bought from us fails in the first year, we will either replace it or refund you. See our satisfaction guarantee page for more details and conditions.

 

Roses 12 Months Plants Guarantee

(4) Third generation family-owned nursery specialising in roses

Jackson’s Nurseries is a 3rd generation family owned business which has been growing roses for over 60 years. Roses have always been our specialty, as you can see from the colourful array of blooms in the background to the old family photo below. Today, we offer over 200 different varieties of floribundas, hybrid teas, patio, shrub and David Austin roses. Our roses are initially grown in the field before being potted up for website dispatch.

 

Third Generation Rose Growing

(5) Grown at altitude to produce strong, healthy plants

Our North Staffordshire nursery is situated at 250 metres above sea level, producing strong, hardy plants that will thrive in your garden. Our nursery sits on clay, so you can be sure our roses can handle heavy soil too.

 

Grown at Altitude Healthy Plants

(6) Help & Advice and Aftercare

We are help to help you with any help and advice you need in choosing, planting and growing your roses before, during and after your purchase from us. The help and advice section of our website has extensive information, see below some examples of articles you may find useful:

 

Help and Advice Aftercare

How our roses are supplied through the seasons

All our roses are cultivated in an open field and are carefully dug up when the weather is optimal, typically in October or November. While other nurseries supply roses bare root, once our field-grown roses have been potted up we supply them freshly potted. This better protects the roots and helps keep them moist in transit, ensuring your roses arrive as healthy as when they left our nursery. So don’t be alarmed if the compost comes away from the roots when you remove them from the pot.

 

Pointing at Graft of Rose after Removing from Pot

The roses can remain in their pots over the winter, as long as they are properly watered and fed, but it's best to plant them out as soon as possible. If you do plant them straight away make sure the planting mix is prepared first, hold the root close to the top of the hole as you tip the pot upside down and try to keep as much compost as possible from falling away. They will already be pruned, so no additional pruning is needed except for trimming any dead tips. Regular pruning can start in late winter, the year after planting.

 

Tying up a Climbing Rose

Rose Types

Hybrid Tea Roses (HT)

Hybrid Tea roses are probably the most popular group of roses, available in both bush and standard form they have long flower stems and shapely blooms. Blooms are typically medium to large in size, with many petals which form a distinct central cone.

Floribunda Roses (FL)

Floribunda roses bears its flowers in clusters or trusses, with several blooms open at time in each truss. A popular choice the Floribunda rose group is unrivalled for colour, reliability and longevity as a bedding display however the flower form in generally inferior to the Hybrid Tea.

Patio Roses (PATIO)

Patio roses were introduced in the 1980’s and the group now contains several popular varieties. Generally low-growing roses that were once grouped with the Floribuna group but have now been put in their own group of compact versions. Usually growing about 50cm high they make excellent plants for patio containers or at the front of borders.

Climbing Roses (CLM)

Climbing roses as the name suggests are the perfect choice for covering a wall or screen. Often grouped together with Ramblers, Climbers tend to have stiffer stems, larger flowers but smaller trusses than Ramblers.

Rambling Roses (RAM)

Rambling roses are often grouped with Climbing Roses but the ramblers tend to have a more pliable stems that can be used to run along the soil to use as groundcover or can be used to make weeping standards.

Miniature Roses (MINI)

Miniature roses have increased in popularity in recent years due to their versatility, even grown indoors as temporary pot plants that grow to a maximum height of 40cm. An ideal choice for planting in tubs, edging beds and rockeries.

English Roses (ENG)

Often referred to as Austin or David Austin Roses, English roses are hybrids of old English roses and more modern varieties bread by David Austin to provide the best of both, mixing old rose shapes and scents with more modern colour range, compact habits and repeat flowering.

Diagram of different types of roses

Planting Advice

Roses like a generous root space, so dig a deep hole approximately twice as wide as the current root system, preferably adding composted organic matter to the soil. Never plant into frozen soil – in winter, await a frost-free period. Carefully remove the pot and gently tease the roots apart to spread them around the hole. Position the plant so that the ‘bud point’ (the place where the shoots emerge from, where the cultivated rose was grafted onto the rootstock) is at soil level. Replace the soil, firming it down gently, then water copiously. Ideally, a general purpose fertiliser should be applied to the surrounding soil as a top dressing. We also highly recommend the use of Rose Rootgrow, which provides a friendly fungus that prevents ‘rose replant syndrome’.

 

Digging Ground for Roses

 

Buying our Roses

Pot Size

Most of our roses are supplied in a 4 litre pot although this may vary slightly depending on rose variety. If the size of pot differes significatly from 4 litres then we will make this clear somewhere on the product page.

Seasonality

Our roses are grown outdoors and as such are subject to seasonal changes. As we sell potted stock throughout the year your rose may not arrive and look like you expect it to. If you are uncertain how your rose will arrive (especially if buying for a gift) then we suggest you contact us prior to making a purchase. 

Freshly Potted

Each year a new batch of roses is potted up ready for the following season. Once potted (usually November/December time) they go on sale as 'Freshly Potted'. If you purchase a freshly potted rose and plant it soon after you will find that when removing the rose from the pot there will be a lot of loose soil as the roots will not have had time to grow and bind the compost.

 

Rose Raised Ready to be Planted

 

Pruned/Cut Back

In autumn the majority of our roses have finished flowering and begin to look untidy, at this point we prune them quite hard in preparation for the following season. We continue to sell roses throughout the year, when a rose has been pruned in such a way we will identify it has being so. If you are not sure what to expect then please ask prior to making a purchase. Some garden centres/supermarkets sell stock that has been grown abroad or in poly-tunnels so they look 'picture perfect' out of season, while this is ideal for a gift they are short lived once planted.

Aftercare

Water regularly until established. In spring, apply a specialised rose fertiliser along with manure mulch, taking care to avoid direct contact of the mulch with the stems. In winter remove all branches which are dead, diseased or damaged along with any older stems as necessary to avoid overcrowding at the centre. Cut back new growth by about a quarter and prune side-shoots to within three buds of the main stem to encourage vigour. Prompt removal of ‘dead-heads’ will encourage further flowering.
 
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