AUSMOL – yellow English rose - Austin
Set the scene for afternoon tea under an arbour with this romantic English shrub rose, its cupped yellow blooms bringing storybook charm to family gardens and small spaces alike. Ausmol’s dense, dark foliage and upright habit create an elegant structure that suits cottage-style borders, low hedges and large containers, even where you need to cope with brisk, coastal-feeling winds and changeable weather. Bred by David Austin and supplied as a premium own‑root plant, it offers reassuring longevity, quietly rebuilding itself after harsh winters and settling in for years of dependable flowering. Medium maintenance needs and solid garden performance mean tasks stay delightfully manageable, while remontant flushes keep borders looking full from summer onwards. In your first year it concentrates on roots, the next on strong shoots, and by the third season it reaches its full ornamental presence, giving you a stable, romantic focal point with a gentle tea‑musk fragrance.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Romantic cottage border in a family garden |
The rich yellow rosette blooms and upright, bushy habit make an ideal cottage‑style centrepiece, easily combined with traditional perennials and herbs for a soft, nostalgic look with year‑round structure and balanced proportions for lovers of romantic borders. |
| Low informal hedge along a path or lawn |
Its dense foliage, repeat flowering and recommended 55 cm hedge spacing allow you to form a low, semi‑formal boundary that stays soft rather than rigid, giving gentle privacy and a welcoming approach for households wanting a traditional hedge. |
| Feature rose in a 40–50 litre patio container |
The compact height, upright framework and medium water needs suit a large pot, where own‑root resilience supports long life; choose a 40–50 litre container with good drainage for busy homeowners who enjoy a manageable patio. |
| Mixed planting in heavier or chalky garden soils |
This variety performs reliably in ordinary garden conditions when planted in improved soil and raised or loosened beds, giving stable colour even where drainage and texture are less than perfect for those gardening on challenging clay. |
| Sunny lawn island or focal bed |
The award‑winning, repeat yellow flowering and slightly glossy dark foliage read clearly from a distance, creating a vivid focal tuft that anchors small to medium lawns without demanding complex pruning for families wanting a clear garden centre. |
| Part‑shade corner near a seating area |
Tolerant of partial shade, it still flowers well in spots with only part‑day sun, while the mild tea‑musk scent and warm colour feel cosy close to a bench or terrace for those seeking a relaxed evening retreat. |
| Informal English kitchen‑garden edge |
Its romantic character fits beautifully beside herbs and vegetables; companion plants like rosemary or montbretia weave through its stems, while medium care needs keep upkeep realistic for home growers who value productive charm. |
| Coastal or breezier suburban gardens |
The robust shrub frame and balanced height cope well with exposed, breezier plots that often feel like windy coastal gardens, remaining steady in moderate gusts when securely planted for gardeners in more wind‑prone locations. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Border Ribbon – Plant a loose row with foxgloves, hardy geraniums and nepeta to create a soft yellow and blue haze along a lawn edge – ideal for homeowners dreaming of a classic cottage stroll.
- Kitchen-Garden Welcome – Flank a vegetable plot entrance with paired shrubs underplanted with chives and rosemary for a fragrant, old‑world gateway – suited to families who mix produce with ornament.
- Patio Feature Pot – Grow one plant in a 40–50 litre terracotta container with trailing thyme and lobelia spilling over the rim – perfect for busy urban gardeners wanting impact near the back door.
- Golden Pathway Hedge – Space plants closely along a garden path for a low, flowering line that guides guests and frames views – for those who like gentle structure without formality.
- Evening Tea Corner – Combine with white roses, pale pink campanulas and a simple metal bench for a calm, luminous nook – ideal for couples who enjoy a quiet cup outdoors.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
English shrub rose from the English Rose Collection; registered as AUSmol, sold as Ausmol yellow English shrub rose; ARS exhibition name ‘Molineux’; romantic shrub and bedding type. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by David C. H. Austin, United Kingdom, from ‘Graham Thomas’ × unnamed seedling; introduced and registered in 1994 by David Austin Roses Ltd as an English shrub rose. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated garden rose including President’s International Trophy RNRS, multiple international trial medals, and the RHS Award of Garden Merit, confirming dependable performance in typical UK gardens. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy shrub typically 80–130 cm high and 70–120 cm wide; dense, dark green, slightly glossy foliage; lightly thorny stems; forms a rounded, balanced outline in borders or low hedges. |
| Flower morphology |
Very full, rosette-shaped clusters with over 40 petals; medium-sized blooms on cluster-flowering stems; remontant habit with an especially abundant second flush, providing colour over an extended season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Golden-yellow petals (RHS 12A outer, 8C inner) opening bright and deep, then lightening towards butter and lemon yellow; colour softens slightly in strong sun, richer in cooler conditions before gentle fading. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, restrained fragrance with tea and musk notes; sufficient for close enjoyment around seating areas, but not overpowering indoors; primarily grown for colour and flower form rather than intense scent. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is usually low due to very double blooms; where formed, hips are small (6–10 mm), spherical, orange-red (RHS 40A), and of minor ornamental significance compared with the repeat flowering display. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7; USDA 5b); medium resistance to black spot, mildew and rust; appreciates regular care and frost protection in early spring in more exposed sites. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suitable for borders, low hedges, containers and specimen use; plant 55–100 cm apart depending on role; prefers well-drained, fertile soil, regular watering in drought, and light annual pruning for shape. |
AUSMOL – yellow English rose - Austin offers romantic yellow blooms, reliable repeat flowering and compact structure on a durable own-root shrub, making it a thoughtful choice if you favour long-lived beauty with modest care needs.