EDDIE'S JEWEL – red wild rose – Eddie
Bring a touch of storybook romance to your garden with Eddie’s Jewel, a tall, graceful shrub rose that feels made for cottage-style arches, kitchen-garden boundaries and relaxed family spaces. Its naturally upright habit creates a soft, informal screen, while the single, jewel-red flowers are especially loved by visiting pollinators and glow even on overcast days. As petals fall, they give way to abundant, bottle-shaped hips for long-lasting interest into autumn and winter. Rooted on its own roots, this shrub builds strength year after year, quietly regenerating without complex pruning and rewarding simple care. You can rely on it to stand steadily even where breezes are persistent and rain is frequent, coping well with typical British coastal-style conditions. Over the first seasons, it settles in gently – first establishing its structure, then filling out, before revealing its full ornamental presence as a mature, romantic garden feature.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Informal cottage hedge along a boundary or drive |
The natural, upright shrub structure allows you to form a soft, informal hedge that fits effortlessly into traditional cottage or kitchen-garden layouts. With its medium maintenance needs and modest thorniness, it is practical along paths and boundaries while still offering privacy and a romantic feel for family gardeners. |
| Specimen shrub in a lawn or front garden |
Planted as a single specimen with generous spacing, this rose develops into a tall, elegant presence that anchors a small to medium front garden. Its own-root vigour supports a long-lived framework, so the shrub keeps its shape and appeal for many years with only occasional shaping cuts, suiting busy homeowners. |
| Wildlife-friendly corner near a seating area |
The simple, open blooms are highly attractive to bees and other beneficial insects, followed by plentiful hips that sustain birds later in the season. This makes it ideal for a wildlife corner close to a bench or terrace, where you can enjoy movement and life in the planting, appealing to nature lovers. |
| Background planting in a cottage-style mixed border |
Its height and upright habit work well at the back of a border, giving a vertical backdrop to herbaceous perennials and low shrubs. Because it tolerates partial shade, you have flexibility in positioning, even in narrower gardens where sunlight shifts during the day, which is reassuring for small-plot owners. |
| Untrimmed rural or village-garden hedge |
Left largely untrimmed, the shrub holds a pleasing, natural outline and reliably sets numerous hips from spent blooms. This makes it a strong choice for more relaxed village gardens where constant clipping is not desirable, while its moderate disease resistance matches the expectations of low-intervention gardeners. |
| Urban green space or shared parking strip |
The sturdy framework and medium maintenance requirement suit low-supervision areas such as shared frontages, parking strips or small communal greens. Once established, it copes well with variable weather and typical urban exposures, fitting the needs of residents’ groups. |
| Screening between garden zones or utility areas |
Its eventual height allows discreet screening of sheds, compost bays or play corners without resorting to hard fencing. The fairly sparse prickles make occasional access through or around the planting more comfortable, which is helpful for family users. |
| Large container on terrace, at least 50 litres |
In a substantial container of 50 litres or more, this own-root shrub can be grown as a vertical accent on a terrace or by a doorway. The balanced, upright habit and limited need for precise pruning make seasonal care straightforward, even for those with only paved space, well suited to townhouse gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Hedge Ribbon – Plant a loose line and weave in baby’s-breath and low geraniums for a soft, frothy base, ideal for those wanting a gentle boundary instead of a harsh fence – traditional-style families.
- Storybook Specimen – Use a single shrub in the lawn, underplanted with spring bulbs and summer catmint to frame the red blooms, perfect for homeowners seeking a simple but striking focal point – beginners.
- Wildlife Orchard Edge – Run a row along the edge of a small fruit area, combining with euonymus groundcover to keep weeds down while hips and flowers support insects and birds – kitchen-garden enthusiasts.
- Romantic Screen – Stagger three plants to divide seating from utility space, threading in lavender and tall campanulas for scent and soft colour contrast – privacy-seeking couples.
- Terrace Landmark – Grow one plant in a 50–70 litre container by the back door, underplanted with trailing lobelia to spill over the rim and highlight the red flowers – urban balcony or courtyard owners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
EDDIE'S JEWEL – red wild rose – Eddie; shrub rose from the Park - shrub rose group, wild rose type within the Hybrid Moyesii shrub category; ARS exhibition name Eddie’s Jewel. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by J. H. Eddie, H. M. Eddie and Sons Nursery, Canada, from ‘Donald Prior’ × Rosa moyesii hybrid; bred and introduced in 1962 as a robust park and shrub rose. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous, upright shrub reaching about 210–310 cm in height and 150–220 cm spread; moderately dense, matt medium‑green foliage; barely thorny shoots; weak self-cleaning with many spent blooms forming hips. |
| Flower morphology |
Single to lightly petalled blooms with 5–12 petals, small size (around 0.5–1.5 in), flat flower form, carried mainly in clusters; once-flowering habit, providing a single main display rather than repeat flushes. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Colour ranges from bright flame-red buds to rich carmine and deep maroon as blooms age; saturated, cool ruby-red tone with excellent colour retention and slight darkening rather than fading; ARS colour mr, RHS 53A–53B. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very weak fragrance, with only a faint floral impression in suitable conditions; visual effect and wildlife value are prioritised over scent, making it mainly a colour and structure feature rose. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces numerous vivid red, bottle-shaped hips, approximately 15–25 mm in diameter; hips remain decorative well into autumn and early winter, extending ornamental interest long after flowering has finished. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately -21 to -18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 3, USDA 6b); moderate resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; tolerates moderate heat, with routine monitoring recommended in humid seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to parks, specimen use, informal hedging and urban green spaces; space at 110–205 cm depending on role; tolerates partial shade; medium maintenance with occasional pest and disease checks advisable. |
EDDIE'S JEWEL offers a tall, upright shrub presence, abundant decorative hips and valuable pollinator support, with the resilience and longevity of an own-root rose, making it a thoughtful choice for long-term cottage-style planting.