BEATRICE KRISMER – salmon-pink flower-bed shrub rose - Scarman
This upright, bushy shrub rose brings a quietly luxurious sense of romance to everyday family gardens, covering itself in double, cup-shaped, salmon-pink blooms with a warm, fruity-tea fragrance that suits afternoon tea beneath an arbour. Bred by John Scarman, it offers dependable, remontant flowering from early summer, with a particularly abundant second flush and good colour continuity as the petals soften to pastel pink and cream. Medium maintenance and medium disease resistance make it a reassuring choice where strong winds and frequent rain call for planting in well-prepared soil with reliable drainage and anchoring. Its moderately dense, glossy mid-green foliage frames the blooms beautifully, while own-root strength supports long-term longevity and regeneration after pruning, especially when you allow roots to establish deeply in the first year for a natural build-up of shoots and full ornamental value by the third season.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Feature rose near a seating area or terrace |
The strong, warm tea-like and fruity scent is ideal beside a bench, terrace or garden table where you linger, so you can actually enjoy the fragrance rather than just view it from indoors; best for those who love perfumed garden corners for relaxation. |
| Cottage-style flowerbed in a small to medium family garden |
Its upright, bushy habit and medium height slot easily into mixed borders without overwhelming nearby perennials, giving that “storybook” cottage look with repeat flowering through summer; well suited to homeowners wanting classic borders with ease. |
| Loose, informal flowering hedge along paths or boundaries |
Recommended planting distances allow you to build a softly billowing hedge with overlapping salmon-pink clusters, providing structure without needing fussy clipping, ideal for families who prefer informal screening and gentle garden boundaries for privacy. |
| Mass planting for consistent colour blocks |
Square or hexagonal planting densities create a carpet of reliably repeating flowers, using its consistent quality and remontant habit to keep beds lively in front gardens or driveways, appealing to busy householders who like simple, unified displays for impact. |
| Roses in heavy or challenging garden soils |
Once established on its own roots, it forms a stable shrub that copes well in typical UK gardens when planted in improved soil or raised beds, particularly where wet spells and strong winds make good drainage and firm anchoring important for reliability. |
| Cutting garden for fragrant rose stems |
Cluster-flowered stems with double, medium-sized blooms and a strong scent lend themselves to jugs and vases in the kitchen or sitting room, suiting those who want to cut a few stems without losing the overall display in the border for homeliness. |
| Long-term structural planting in family gardens |
Own-root growth and H7 hardiness help it recover well if cut back by weather or pruning, supporting a long planting life with stable ornamental value and reducing the need to replace tired bushes, attractive for gardeners planning their borders for longevity. |
| Large containers on patios or in courtyard gardens |
In a 40–50 litre or larger pot, its upright, bushy habit and glossy foliage give a neat, romantic presence on balconies or patios, provided watering and feeding are regular, ideal for urban gardeners wanting roses without a full ground-level border for convenience. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Stripe Border – Plant in a gentle drift with catmint, lady’s mantle and soft grasses to echo an English cottage lane – ideal for lovers of relaxed, traditional front gardens.
- Kitchen-Garden Edge – Use as a fragrant edging to a veg patch, mixing with chives and sage to blur the line between ornament and produce – suited to home cooks who want beauty around practical beds.
- Romantic Seating Nook – Flank a small bench with two shrubs and underplant with coral bells for foliage contrast – perfect for those creating an afternoon tea corner under an arbour.
- Pastel Colour Block – Combine with pale foxgloves and soft pink phlox to build a uniform salmon-and-cream palette – good for buyers who favour harmonious, low-fuss mass planting.
- Patio Statement Pot – Grow one plant in a 50-litre terracotta container with trailing thyme at the base – best for balcony or courtyard owners seeking a single, showpiece rose.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
BEATRICE KRISMER – salmon-pink flower-bed shrub rose, shrub group, bed rose commercial group; current trade name from Scarman, female given-name cultivar with verified authenticity. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by John Scarman in Germany and introduced in 2007 by Scarman Roses and Landhaus Ettenbühl; parentage is not recorded, selection aimed at consistent garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy shrub reaching around 110–150 cm high and 100–140 cm wide, with moderately dense, glossy mid-green foliage and moderate prickliness; forms a balanced, structural garden shrub. |
| Flower morphology |
Double, cup-shaped blooms with approximately 26–39 petals, medium flower size on cluster-flowered stems; remontant habit with a notably abundant second flush for extended seasonal display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft salmon-pink with peach tints; buds deep salmon, opening to light salmon-pink with warmer centres, then fading to pastel pink and cream-edged tones while retaining harmonious, even colour. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Clearly scented rose with strong, warm tea-like fragrance layered with fruity notes; best appreciated near paths or seating areas where air movement gently carries the perfume. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces small numbers of ovoid, egg-shaped hips, about 8–12 mm in diameter, in orange-red tones, adding a modest decorative note later in the season without dominating the plant. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Medium resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, with routine monitoring advised; rated to around –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3, USDA 6b) for reliable winter survival. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Medium maintenance rose sometimes needing plant protection; recommended spacings: 110 cm for masses, 100 cm for hedges, 180 cm as specimen, at about 0.8–1.0 plants/m² for full coverage. |
BEATRICE KRISMER offers romantic, repeat flowering, strong fragrance and long-lived own-root reliability, making it a thoughtful choice for creating a gently perfumed, enduring rose presence in an everyday family garden.