FAIRY ROUGE – red groundcover rose – Moore
FAIRY ROUGE brings an instantly romantic, storybook feel to an everyday family garden, its low, arching habit creating a carpet of neat red blooms that look at home along a cottage path, edging a kitchen bed or spilling from a generous pot. This compact rose lends a sense of cosy enclosure, ideal beside a seating area where you can imagine afternoon tea under an arbour while its small pompon flowers repeat steadily from early summer into autumn. As an own-root plant it is naturally resilient and long-lived, regrowing strongly from the base if ever cut back hard, which helps it settle securely even where gardens face frequent wind and rain near the coast. Over the seasons its spreading, leafy mound knits gently into borders and low hedging, combining happily with herbs and perennials in a relaxed, “girly” English countryside style. Simple planting, reliable flowering and only moderate care needs make this cultivar a reassuring choice for busy and beginner gardeners alike, with roots establishing in the first year, top growth building in the second and full ornamental effect typically evident by the third, so you can plan your small-space cottage planting with quiet confidence and lasting ease.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front-of-border cottage edging |
The low, spreading habit forms a continuous, billowing line of small red pompon blooms, perfect for softening path edges and framing mixed cottage borders without blocking the view behind. Compact growth makes maintenance simple for the homeowner. |
| Groundcover on banks and open beds |
Its wide spread and dense foliage help cover bare soil, reducing visible gaps while providing a long season of colour; own-root vigour supports gradual renewal from the base, giving dependable coverage for many years for the family. |
| Large containers and terrace planters |
The naturally compact, arching structure suits a 40–50 litre or larger container, where repeated flushes of blossom create a romantic focal point by a bench or doorway, with only moderate pruning needed for the city-dweller. |
| Low informal hedge along paths |
Planted at hedge spacing, plants knit together into a low, flowered line that guides movement through the garden, ideal to separate a lawn from a kitchen garden or play space, while remaining easy to trim and tidy for the planner. |
| Family garden flower bed in changeable weather |
Once established, its spreading form and own-root robustness give good anchoring and stability, coping well where gardens experience blustery days and frequent coastal-style rain and wind, reassuring for the coastal gardener. |
| Traditional “girly” cottage-style mix |
The pure scarlet-red flowers bring a cheerful, storybook accent among pale perennials and herbs, repeating in clusters that echo classic polyantha charm, ideal for creating a softly romantic look for the romantic buyer. |
| Low-maintenance family planting scheme |
Moderate care needs, combined with remontant flowering and only occasional deadheading, mean you gain plenty of colour without complex pruning routines, while own-root durability supports a long planting life for the busy household. |
| Small gardens and narrow side strips |
The controlled height but generous width make it suitable for slim borders where you want impact without tall shrubs; its mounded shape fills awkward spaces neatly, suiting compact plots for the beginner gardener. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Path Edging – run FAIRY ROUGE in a loose line along gravel or brick paths, interplanting with low catmint or pinks for a soft, storybook look – ideal for lovers of traditional cottage style.
- Kitchen-Garden Border – edge vegetable beds with this rose, then weave in chives and marigolds so flowers frame productive rows in a “girly” yet practical potager – suited to home growers wanting charm and order.
- Romantic Patio Pot – plant a single rose in a 50–60 litre terracotta container and underplant with trailing thyme or aubretia to cascade over the rim – perfect for balcony or terrace owners seeking easy romance.
- Low Scarlet Hedge – create a knee-high, wavy hedge beside lawn or driveway, combining with lavender pockets at intervals – best for families wanting soft boundaries without heavy maintenance.
- Bank and Slope Cover – mass-plant on a gentle bank, mixing with groundcover perennials like ajuga for contrasting foliage textures – useful for gardeners aiming to stabilise awkward areas attractively.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic | Data |
| Name and registration |
Groundcover polyantha rose; registered as MORedfar, marketed as FAIRY ROUGE / Red Fairy. Belongs to the Ground cover collection and used as an exhibition polyantha and low edging rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Ralph S. Moore at Sequoia Nursery, Visalia, California, USA. Introduced and registered in 1995, with the same year reflecting its breeding completion and initial commercial distribution. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds an American Rose Society rating of 8.2 points in the Polyantha category, indicating above-average garden performance and ornamental value under a range of amateur gardening conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Low, widely spreading shrub reaching about 60–95 cm in height and 90–140 cm spread. Dense, slightly glossy light- to medium-green foliage; moderately thorny stems and a strongly ground-hugging, mounded habit. |
| Flower morphology |
Small, double pompon flowers, 0.5–1.5 inches across, carried in clusters. Petal count typically 26–39. Remontant, with a generous second flush of bloom after the main early-summer flowering period. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Medium scarlet-red blooms (RHS 46A outer, 46B inner), slightly paler in strong sun and deeper in cooler weather. Colour remains fairly even across the bloom, providing a consistent red impact through the season. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Delicate, sweet fragrance of very weak intensity; scent is barely perceptible in typical garden conditions, so planting is recommended primarily for colour and form rather than for perfume-led displays. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose-hip production is usually low because of the double flower form; when present, hips are small, 6–9 mm, globular and orange-red to red, adding light ornamental interest late in the season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to around –26 to –23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4). Heat tolerance moderate; needs watering in long dry spells. Disease resistance moderate to powdery mildew, black spot and rust. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun. Suitable for beds, borders, containers and groundcover. Recommended spacings: 90 cm for mass planting, 80 cm for hedging, 150 cm as a specimen; about 1.2–1.4 plants per m² depending on layout. |
FAIRY ROUGE offers compact spreading growth, repeated scarlet-red flowering and reliable performance in family gardens, while its own-root form supports long-term renewal and ease of care, making it a thoughtful choice for enduring cottage charm.