Caroline's Heart – Park shrub rose (VEL16dsipo)
Softly romantic and gently upright, Caroline's Heart settles into family gardens with grace, cupped pastel blooms and a strong, old-rose fragrance that lingers around patios and paths. Its compact shrub habit gives natural-looking structure for cottage borders and small lawns, while moderate height makes it easy to place near seating or a kitchen-garden fence. As an own-root shrub it offers dependable regeneration, building a long-lived framework that copes well once established. Over time, it rewards simple care with reliable repeat flowering and a calm, evenly pink colour that suits “girly” planting schemes. In exposed or coastal spots it benefits from planting where soil drains freely after rain and wind, supporting a stable root system and healthy top growth. Given a sunny position and thoughtful watering, it adds quiet romance for afternoon tea corners and storybook-style paths, maturing steadily from young plant to full ornamental presence.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Cottage-style mixed border in a family garden |
The compact yet upright shrub habit gives reliable structure without dominating neighbouring perennials, while the pastel pink, cupped blooms blend easily with “girly” cottage plants. Repeat flowering across the season means colour returns after each flush with only light dead-heading, suiting time-pressed home gardeners and beginners. |
| Near seating, terrace or garden bench |
The strong, long-lasting old-rose and myrrh fragrance is best appreciated close to where people sit, creating a cosy, afternoon-tea atmosphere. Regular scent from repeat flowering encourages simple routines of watering and feeding rather than intensive pruning, ideal for fragrance lovers and busy-urban-owners. |
| Feature shrub by a path or entrance |
Its compact, upright growth and dense, dark green foliage form a neat, legible outline that frames gateways and paths without excessive width. The plant builds a woody framework steadily, promising a long-lived focal point when planted as an own-root shrub and cared for by homeowners. |
| Small hedge or loose screen |
Regular repeat flowering along the stems and moderate height allow it to form a softly flowering screen between garden areas. With correct spacing, plants knit together into a practical, attractive barrier that is easier to maintain than clipped shrubs, well suited to relaxed, family-use boundaries and traditionalists. |
| Large container on patio or balcony (40–50 litres+) |
In a generously sized pot, its compact structure and dense foliage create a tidy, vertical accent with scented blooms at eye level. The own-root habit copes well with rejuvenation pruning when plants age, so tubs can be refreshed rather than replaced, a practical choice for long-term planners and budget-conscious-buyers. |
| Naturalistic planting with perennials and grasses |
The pastel, even pink colour and cupped flower form sit comfortably among airy perennials, supporting a naturalistic yet romantic effect. Moderate self-cleaning reduces the need to remove every spent flower immediately, fitting subtly managed plantings that still feel cared-for by hobby-gardeners. |
| Lightly sheltered spots in heavier garden soils |
Planted where soil drains freely after heavy rain and coastal winds, its own-root system anchors firmly and supports steady top growth. With thoughtful site choice and mulching, maintenance focuses on seasonal feeding and protection rather than constant intervention, attractive to pragmatic UK gardeners and clay-soil-owners. |
| Long-term specimen in a front garden |
As an own-root shrub, it can regenerate from the base if stems are damaged or pruned harder, supporting a longer lifespan and more stable ornamental value. This underpins year-on-year flowering with relatively simple care, reassuring those who want dependable front-garden impact and family-buyers. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Border Charm – Combine Caroline's Heart with pink lupins and airy verbena for a softly structured, repeat-flowering cottage border – ideal for lovers of romantic, “girly” English-country style.
- Fragrant-Tea Corner – Position near a bench with lavender and low herbs so the strong, old-rose fragrance drifts around your seating – perfect for those who enjoy quiet, scented afternoon breaks outdoors.
- Pastel-Front Garden – Use as a long-lived specimen framed by catmint and soft grasses, relying on its own-root regeneration for dependable structure – suited to homeowners wanting gentle kerb appeal.
- Patio-Centrepiece – Grow one shrub in a 40–50 litre container with trailing violas at the rim, using its compact habit and repeat flowering to anchor a small terrace – good for busy urban gardeners with limited borders.
- Naturalistic-Romance – Weave through perennials like Liatris ‘Kobold’ to add pastel structure and moderate self-cleaning blooms to a looser planting – appealing to hobby gardeners who prefer soft, informal layouts.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Shrub rose, park type; registered as VEL16dsipo, marketed as Caroline's Heart, Park – shrub rose. Verified cultivar authenticity under the product name CAROLINE for consumer garden use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Ann Velle Boudolf at Lens Roses, Belgium, around 2016 and introduced commercially in 2018, reflecting the Lens tradition of natural-looking shrub roses for gardens and landscapes. |
| Awards and recognition |
Widely trialled in European rose competitions: 1st prize in Barcelona for landscape roses, silver medal at Baden-Baden, Warsaw bronze medal, Lyon landscape certificate, plus further recognition in Hradec Králové. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact, upright shrub with dense, slightly glossy, dark green foliage. Reaches about 120–190 cm in height and 60–100 cm spread, moderately thorny, forming a full, bushy outline suitable for borders and hedging. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, cupped blooms with 26–30 petals, carried mostly in corymbs. Repeats well with a particularly abundant second flush; moderate self-cleaning so some spent blooms benefit from occasional removal. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft, even pastel pink with ARS LP; RHS 65C outer, 65D inner. Colour fades gradually towards the petal edges and in strong sun, ending in near-white inner bases; overall colour retention rated very good for garden display. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Notable for a strong, long-lasting scent with classic old-rose and myrrh notes. Best experienced near seating or paths where repeated flowering ensures a consistent fragrance presence through the main season. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional ellipsoid hips, roughly 8–12 mm in diameter, ripening to orange-red. Decorative in a modest way late in the season, but not produced in very large numbers under typical garden maintenance. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated to around -15 to -12 °C, RHS H6, Swedish zone 2, USDA 7b. Moderate heat tolerance; needs watering during prolonged drought. Disease resistance is medium for mildew and black spot, more sensitive to rust. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny sites with fertile, well-drained soil; prefers regular feeding and timely plant protection. Space 40–75 cm depending on use; around 4–4.6 plants/m² for mass planting, also suitable for large containers. |
Caroline's Heart offers fragrant, repeat-flowering pastel blooms on a compact shrub that builds long-lived, regenerating structure as an own-root plant, a thoughtful choice for relaxed yet enduring cottage-style gardens.