BIRTHE KJAER – Red Nostalgic Rose - Olesen
Invite a sense of storybook romance to your garden with Birthe Kjaer, a richly red nostalgia rose that fits effortlessly into cottage-style borders and cosy seating areas. Its bushy, upright habit and dense, glossy foliage anchor the planting, coping reliably even in exposed gardens where frequent wind and rain test less robust shrubs. Large, double, rosette blooms create a classic aroma-filled display on 3–5 flower clusters, with repeat flowering that keeps beds colourful from early summer well into autumn. As an own-root shrub it develops steadily, rewarding simple care with dependable regrowth after pruning or weather setbacks and a naturally long lifespan in family plots. Planted once into good soil and given reasonable drainage, it matures into a long-term feature, supporting that English countryside feeling of relaxed elegance around paths, lawns and kitchen gardens.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Romantic focal point in a small family garden |
The generous, double, mid-red rosette blooms draw the eye without overwhelming a modest plot, making one or three shrubs ideal as a focal feature close to a terrace, bench or front door for those who value graceful, traditional planting homeowners |
| Summer-long colour in mixed cottage borders |
Remontant flowering with a strong second flush keeps the border lively from early season through late summer, pairing well with perennials and herbs in cottage-style schemes that favour continuity of colour for relaxed, informal spaces cottage-garden lovers |
| Scented seating area or “afternoon tea” corner |
Strong, long-lasting fragrance means a small group near seating can perfume the air, creating that afternoon-tea-under-an-arbour atmosphere without demanding complex rose pruning or spraying routines from time-pressed garden owners busy urban gardeners |
| Stable structure and screening in family plots |
The bushy, upright habit and dense foliage form a coherent shrub that helps to define spaces and soften boundaries, offering moderate height for privacy and a reliable outline that anchors beds through the seasons in lived-in gardens family buyers |
| Low-effort maintenance for hobby gardeners |
Good self-cleaning means most spent blooms drop without deadheading, keeping the plant tidy with minimal effort; light annual trimming is usually enough to maintain shape, fitting well where straightforward care routines are preferred hobby gardeners |
| Long-term planting in established borders |
As an own-root shrub it can live and perform for many years, regrowing from its own wood after hard pruning or winter damage, so a one-off planting can mature into a dependable, sustainable element in evolving family gardens long-term planners |
| Plots with heavier or wetter soils |
Once planted into a bed with sensible drainage or a slightly raised position, the shrub forms a firm, anchoring root system that copes well in gardens where wind and regular rain would otherwise batter more delicate, shallow-rooted plants challenging-site owners |
| Large containers on patios and cottages |
Its upright, bushy form suits a substantial container of at least 40–50 litres, where a well-prepared, moisture-retentive yet free-draining mix supports gradually building roots, stems and finally a full ornamental show over several seasons patio gardeners |
Styling ideas
- COTTAGE-HEDGE – Plant a loose row along a path with cheddar pink and catmint, letting the red rosettes and soft pastels spill together – ideal for lovers of informal cottage borders.
- TEA-CORNER – Place one or three shrubs by a small seating area with lavender and potted herbs to emphasise fragrance and repeated bloom – perfect for those creating a cosy afternoon-tea nook.
- KITCHEN-MIX – Combine with purple loosestrife and culinary sage near raised beds, where the structured shrub anchors the productive garden – suited to rural-style kitchen garden enthusiasts.
- FRONT-GARDEN – Use as a welcoming focal shrub among low evergreens such as compact cherry laurel for year-round structure and nostalgic flower power – good for homeowners wanting classic kerb appeal.
- PATIO-STATEMENT – Grow in a 50-litre terracotta pot with trailing thyme at the base, placing it where scent and colour can be enjoyed daily – for balcony and terrace gardeners seeking easy romance.
Technical cultivar profile
| Aspect | Data |
| Name and registration |
Birthe Kjaer Renaissance, registered as POUlren033, a shrub (nostalgia) rose from the Renaissance collection, commercial type Romantic rose, exhibition category shrub rose for garden and landscape use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in Denmark in 2019 by Mogens Nyegaard Olesen for Poulsen Roser A/S, from unnamed seedling parents; introduced after 2020, with EU CPVO registration in 2020 and US plant patent protection in 2022. |
| Awards and recognition |
Bronze Medal at the Japan Rose Concours in Tokyo in 2021, indicating good ornamental performance and presentation under trial conditions, particularly in terms of flower form, colour and overall garden effect. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub reaching around 100–140 cm in height and 70–110 cm spread; dense mid-green glossy foliage (RHS 137A) with moderate prickles, forming a substantial, well-filled, structural garden plant. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double rosette blooms with 26–39 petals, typically 3–5 per stem, in the L size range; remontant with an abundant second flush, producing classic nostalgic flowers suitable for cutting and display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Rich, uniform mid-red (RHS 46A outer, 46B inner) with velvety petals; colour fades only slightly toward raspberry red while retaining clarity, giving a stable, clean red impression from bud to full bloom and decline. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Classed as strongly scented with long-lasting perfume; detailed fragrance notes are not documented, but the intensity and persistence make it a good choice where scented blooms near seating areas are desired. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hips occur only sparsely due to the double flowers; when present, they are small, globose, about 8–12 mm in diameter, and red (RHS 53A), adding occasional, subtle autumn interest rather than heavy displays. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 3, USDA 6b); disease resistance is moderate for black spot, powdery mildew and rust, requiring periodic monitoring and, if needed, light treatment. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best at 55–65 cm spacing, 2.4–2.7 plants/m²; thrives in well-prepared soil with reasonable drainage; suitable for beds, parks, specimens, hedging and cut flowers, and accepts light partial shade in many gardens. |
BIRTHE KJAER – Red Nostalgic Rose - Olesen offers romantic red blooms, strong scent and a bushy, structural habit on a durable own-root shrub that can become a long-term feature in your garden; consider it where you want effortless cottage charm.