LOVE KNOT – red climbing rose - Warner
Let Love Knot weave a romantic, storybook arbour around your family garden, its velvety crimson clusters creating a cosy backdrop for afternoon tea while coping reliably with brisk coastal breezes and unsettled weather. This compact climbing rose clothes pergolas, fences and small arches with glossy mid-green foliage and self-cleaning blooms, so spent flowers mostly drop away without demanding constant deadheading from busy gardeners. Raised on its own roots, it settles securely, builds strength year by year and is naturally inclined to long-term regrowth, giving you a stable, enduring feature rather than a short-lived display. In return for moderate, straightforward care and a sunny spot, its repeat-flowering, medium-height climber habit offers flexible training options in smaller UK plots, including generous containers from about 40–50 litres for urban patios.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Small family pergola or tea arbour |
Reaching around 1.8–2.6 m with a tidy spread, this rose is ideal for modest pergolas where you want shade and privacy without overwhelming the space. Its manageable canes are easy to tie in along rafters for a romantic, flower-framed seating nook for beginners. |
| Front-garden fence or low trellis |
The relatively compact width and slightly thorny shoots make it practical for front boundaries, giving rich red colour without invading pavements. Good self-cleaning means fewer spent blooms to pick, so the fence line stays neat even for busy-owners. |
| Cottage-style mixed border backdrop |
Clusters of vivid crimson flowers and mid-green glossy foliage create a strong vertical accent behind perennials and herbs, fitting perfectly into a “girly” English cottage look. Medium disease resistance is acceptable where beds are well aired for hobby-gardeners. |
| Large container on sunny terrace (40–50 L+) |
As an own-root climber with moderate vigour, it is well suited to a substantial pot from 40–50 litres upwards, trained up a slim obelisk or wall trellis. Regular watering and feeding reward you with repeat flushes, with manageable pruning for urban-owners. |
| Sheltered coastal or windy sites |
The firm, medium-length shoots and moderately dense foliage anchor well to supports, coping with blustery days and changeable weather while keeping their decorative value even where rain and wind regularly sweep across the garden for coastal-families. |
| Romantic arch over a path |
Its flower size and clustering habit suit narrower arches: you get lots of small, velvety blooms at eye level without heavy, unwieldy stems. Training young canes sideways encourages more flowering shoots, giving a welcoming entrance for cottage-lovers. |
| Long-term feature in established family garden |
As an own-root plant, it can regenerate from the base if cut back hard, supporting a long lifespan and stable appearance. Over the first seasons it builds a strong framework and reliable flowering rhythm, rewarding patient planners. |
| Simple, low-fuss climbing rose scheme |
This variety offers a balanced mix of medium maintenance needs and reliable rebloom, suiting those who can manage basic pruning and occasional spraying but do not want fussy, high-input roses; training and trimming remain manageable for most homeowners. |
Styling ideas
- Storybook-arch – Train Love Knot over a narrow metal arch with white foxgloves and soft pink campanulas beneath, for a fairytale path between lawn and kitchen garden – ideal for cottage-romantics.
- Teacup-pergola – Cover a small timber pergola above a bistro set, underplanting with lavender and thyme to perfume summer afternoons – perfect for families who enjoy relaxed weekend tea outdoors.
- Crimson-fence – Line a front fence with Love Knot and airy Coreopsis verticillata, letting the red blooms dance against gold daisies – suited to homeowners wanting cheerful kerbside charm.
- Patio-column – Grow it in a 50-litre terracotta pot with a slim obelisk, softening a sunny terrace corner alongside heucheras and dwarf grasses – great for urban gardeners with limited ground space.
- Kitchen-border – Mix Love Knot on a wall trellis with herbs, bupleurum and cottage annuals, tying the productive and ornamental sides of the garden together – for those who like a lived-in, homely plot.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Miniature climbing rose, registered as CHEWglorious, marketed as Love Knot – red climbing rose – Warner; exhibition miniature climber and cut-flower type with small, clustered blooms. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Christopher H. Warner in Shropshire, UK, from ‘Laura Ford’ × ‘Ingrid Bergman’; registered 1999, introduced 2000 via Warner’s Roses and Tasman Bay Roses in selected markets. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the RHS Award of Garden Merit (2012) for dependable garden performance, plus Best Climber at the Hamilton New Zealand Rose Trial Station (2014), confirming ornamental and structural quality. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Climbing habit, approximately 1.8–2.6 m high and 0.6–1.0 m wide, with moderately dense, glossy mid-green foliage, slightly thorny stems and a framework suited to fences, arches and small pergolas. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cluster-flowered, medium-sized blooms (about 4–7 cm) with 13–25 petals, shallowly cupped form and good self-cleaning, providing multiple flushes including a generous second flowering. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Velvety crimson red with subtle light play, ARS mr, RHS 53A–53B; buds ruby red with darker tips, colour deepens to wine-red then lightens slightly in strong sun while generally holding well on the plant. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak, only a slight sweet note noticeable at close range; selected more for colour impact and floral display than for scent, so best combined with fragrant companions if aroma is desired. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasionally sets small, spherical red hips about 6–10 mm across, providing an additional decorative touch in late season, though not produced in heavy quantities or relied on for wildlife value. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
RHS H7, hardy approximately to −21 to −18 °C, USDA zone 6b; shows medium resistance to black spot, mildew and rust, benefitting from good air circulation and routine, non-intensive plant protection. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun, trained on pergolas, fences, walls or posts; plant 45–85 cm apart depending on use, at about 3.6–4.1 plants/m², with regular watering in summer and straightforward, annual pruning. |
LOVE KNOT – red climbing rose - Warner offers compact climbing growth, self-cleaning crimson blooms and long-lived own-root reliability, making it a cultivated choice for those planning a lasting, romantic garden feature.