PERSIAN DAWN – pink-lilac climbing rose - Vissers
Imagine settling with afternoon tea beneath a cottage arbour as clusters of pink‑lilac blooms with a ruby eye spill around you in gentle, repeat waves of colour and romance. PERSIAN DAWN Climbing rose VISeureye is an own‑root climber bred for decorative impact rather than complicated care, ideal for average family gardens where you want drama without fuss. Semi‑double, open flowers invite bees, while good self‑cleaning keeps the display neat with minimal deadheading. Once established, its good heat and drought tolerance fits typical UK summers, even in more exposed gardens where breezy conditions and passing showers are the norm. Over time, the own‑root structure supports a long lifespan, steady regrowth from the base and reliable ornamental value. In its first year it concentrates on roots, the second on taller shoots, and by the third season it typically delivers its full cottage‑garden statement.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Climbing focal point on an arbour or arch |
The strong vertical growth and 2,5–4 m height make this rose ideal for framing a seating area or garden path, creating that storybook arched entrance to a cottage‑style garden for those who prefer a romantic look as homeowners. |
| Relaxed cottage‑style pergola or veranda cover |
Its creeping, flexible habit is easy to train along horizontal beams, giving dappled shade and blossom above an outdoor table, with minimal deadheading thanks to good self‑cleaning for those who enjoy simple gardening as beginners. |
| Feature climber in a mixed cottage border |
The compact flower size and unusual eye mean it reads well among perennials and herbs without overpowering them, so it suits kitchen‑garden borders where you want colour, bees and structure together as busy gardeners. |
| Small family garden screen or boundary accent |
Planted along a low fence or informal screen, its 1,5–2,5 m spread and repeat‑flowering habit provide a soft, flowery division of space with moderate maintenance needs for those planning a practical plot as urban families. |
| Large container or half‑barrel near a seating area |
In a 40–50 litre container with a sturdy obelisk, it offers vertical interest on patios or roof terraces; own‑root resilience helps it recover from winter or pruning, reassuring those with limited space as city‑dwellers. |
| Naturalistic planting with ornamental grasses |
The semi‑double, open blooms and tidy fall of spent flowers complement airy grasses and long‑flowering perennials, building a sensitive, low‑fuss naturalistic effect that still feels romantic for those inspired by meadow style as enthusiasts. |
| Low‑maintenance family seating corner |
Once rooted in well‑prepared soil, it needs only straightforward pruning and occasional plant protection; its own‑root constitution supports steady regrowth year after year, suiting those wanting dependable colour as time‑poor owners. |
| Wind‑touched, showery side of the garden |
With good heat tolerance and medium disease resistance, it copes well where summer brings alternating breezes and showers, provided drainage is reasonable, suiting those gardening in changeable conditions as coastal‑edge residents. |
Styling ideas
- Tea‑time arbour – Train PERSIAN DAWN over a simple wooden arch flanked by lavender and catmint, creating a scented walk‑through for afternoon tea – ideal for romantic cottage‑garden lovers.
- Kitchen‑garden rosewalk – Run paired arches down a vegetable path and let the rose repeat‑flower above herbs and salad beds for a productive yet ornamental axis – perfect for rural kitchen‑garden keepers.
- Pastel pergola – Combine this climber with soft pink and white climbers and pale grasses along a pergola for a light, airy canopy – suited to homeowners seeking a gentle, feminine palette.
- Naturalistic corner – Plant with English bluebeard, low catmint and stonecrop at its feet, letting the semi‑double blooms float above textured foliage – for fans of relaxed, wildlife‑friendly schemes.
- Courtyard vertical – Grow in a 50‑litre half‑barrel with a metal obelisk, underplanted with herbs, to bring height and colour to paved spaces – ideal for busy urban gardeners with limited borders.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid Hulthemia persica climbing rose, registered as VISeureye, marketed as PERSIAN DAWN – pink‑lilac climbing rose – Vissers; exhibition category ornamental climbing rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Martin Vissers in Belgium (2010), introduced and registered in 2016 by Viva International, Netherlands; parentage officially unknown but selected for distinctive eye‑zone flowers. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds a Certificate of Excellence from Boskoop’s Royal Horticultural Society – Excellence Roses (2025), highlighting its ornamental garden value and reliable performance under trial conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous creeping climber reaching 2,5–4 m high and 1,5–2,5 m spread, with moderately dense, mid‑green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickliness; suitable for arches, fences and pergolas. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi‑double, flat, cluster‑flowered blooms, generally 13–25 petals and small in size; flowers are self‑cleaning with most spent blooms dropping naturally, and the variety repeat‑flowers generously. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pink‑lilac petals with a contrasting maroon‑purple to mauve eye and golden stamens; colour fades towards blush and near‑white, with an extended, repeating flowering season in suitable conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is light and subtle rather than dominant, adding a gentle background note; semi‑double, open flowers offer pollen access, making it partially attractive to visiting bees and other pollinators. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderately abundant, small spherical hips, around 7–10 mm in diameter, ripening to orange‑red and adding a discrete late‑season decorative element and wildlife interest after flowering. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); good heat tolerance, resistant to powdery mildew and black spot, with medium susceptibility to rust in damp seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with well‑drained soil; suitable for borders, specimen use, hedging and urban green spaces; medium maintenance with occasional plant protection and support on trellis or wires. |
PERSIAN DAWN – pink-lilac climbing rose - Vissers offers romantic repeat flowering, neat self-cleaning clusters and long-lived own-root resilience, making it a thoughtful choice for those planning a relaxed, enduring garden feature.