THE SCOTSMAN™ – mauve hybrid tea rose - Olesen & Olesen
This refined hybrid tea brings a touch of storybook romance to even the most practical family garden, combining medium, upright growth with reliably repeat-flowering performance for easy afternoon-tea ambience beneath an arbour or pergola. Large, mauve blooms open from deep crimson‑purple buds into full, generously petalled cups that gradually acquire a soft, silvery sheen, giving you a constantly changing display without complicated maintenance. Own‑root plants develop steadily for the long term, building from strong roots to flowering shoots and then full garden presence over three seasons, so you can plant once and enjoy for years with only light annual pruning. With good heat and short‑term drought tolerance that suits breezier, more exposed gardens where summer watering can be uneven, it is well adapted to typical British conditions. The dense, glossy dark green foliage forms a stable backdrop for the flowers and anchors the plant visually in mixed borders or as a front‑of‑house feature. In a sufficiently large container of at least 40–50 litres it becomes a charming patio focal point, while in the ground it works beautifully with cottage‑style perennials and kitchen‑garden edges, bringing reliable colour and a gently spicy fragrance that feels both traditional and relaxing.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Feature rose near seating or terrace |
The Scotsman™ forms a neat, upright bush with dense foliage, making it easy to position beside a bench, arbour or patio table where it will not sprawl into walkways. Its medium height frames eye level without blocking views, suiting those wanting relaxed structure near seating, especially beginners. |
| Cottage-style mixed border |
Large, classically shaped mauve blooms with a silvery cast blend well with pastel and cool-toned cottage plants, giving a romantic, English-countryside feel. Regular repeat flowering means gaps between flushes are short, supporting borders that must look good over a long season for homeowners. |
| Cutting patch or kitchen garden edge |
Hybrid tea form and long, straight stems make this cultivar ideal for cutting, while the medium, spicy fragrance adds character in vases. Planting along a vegetable or herb garden edge gives colour without sacrificing practicality, suiting space-conscious urbanites. |
| Container rose on patio or balcony |
Its upright habit and moderate spread allow successful cultivation in a large container of 40–50 litres or more, where roots have enough volume to stay moist between waterings and the plant remains balanced in wind. This suits paved spaces used by time-poor families. |
| Sunny front garden or entrance |
The cultivar prefers a sunny position and shows good colour retention, so blooms remain attractive longer on exposed house fronts. Planting at recommended spacings keeps maintenance simple and shape tidy, ideal for those who want a smart approach without intensive shaping, including busy-owners. |
| Low-maintenance own-root planting for longevity |
Supplied on its own roots, the rose establishes as a stable, long-lived shrub that can regrow from the base if stems are damaged, maintaining ornamental value with straightforward pruning. This long-view reliability appeals to forward-planning gardeners. |
| Resilient choice for slightly exposed plots |
Good heat and temporary drought tolerance help the plant cope in breezier or more open gardens where summer watering can be irregular and wind may dry the soil quickly, supporting confident flowering under typical British mixed weather for practical-minded buyers. |
| Simple care rose bed or small hedge |
Moderate maintenance needs and self-cleaning over 8–10 days keep deadheading and disease control manageable, while suggested planting distances make it easy to design a low hedge or grouped bed with enough airflow. This straightforward regime is well suited to relaxed hobbyists. |
Styling ideas
- Tea-time Arbour – Train The Scotsman™ as a pair of upright accents at the base of a light arch, underplanted with catmint and lavender for scented, mauve-toned clouds – ideal for cottage-garden romantics.
- Kitchen-Edge Row – Line a vegetable or herb plot with evenly spaced plants, adding Crocosmia ‘Lucifer’ for contrasty spikes that echo cut-flower colours – perfect for practical growers who also love bouquets.
- Patio Showcase – Place a single plant in a 50-litre clay pot, skirted with trailing thyme to soften the rim and highlight the upright form – suited to small-terrace owners wanting an easy focal point.
- Soft Mauve Border – Combine with Panicum ‘Sangria’ and pale pink perennials for a misty, layered border where the mauve flowers float against airy grasses – for design-conscious gardeners seeking gentle structure.
- Welcoming Front Path – Plant in a loose row beside a front path at recommended hedge spacing, punctuated with evergreen dwarf honeysuckle for year-round foliage – good for families wanting tidy charm with modest upkeep.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as POUlscots, marketed as The Scotsman™ Paramount® POUlscots; ARS exhibition name The Scotsman, premium gold rated cultivar in the darinaROSE® ORIGINAL 2‑litre range. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by L. Pernille Olesen and Mogens Nyegaard Olesen (Poulsen Roser A/S, Denmark) from ‘Karen Blixen’ × ‘Blue Moon’; selected and introduced in 2001 as a mauve hybrid tea for garden and cutting use. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright bushy plant, around 75–105 cm high and 65–95 cm wide, with dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickliness; suitable for specimen planting, grouped beds and low hedging in family gardens. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, cup-shaped blooms with 26–39 petals, borne mostly solitary on stems; remontant, providing a generous second flush, with self-cleaning spent blooms dropping after 8–10 days when not deadheaded. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Saturated mauve‑purple petals with bluish sheen (RHS 75A, 75C); buds deep crimson-purple, opening vibrant mauve with crimson tinge, then fading to rosy-lilac with a silvery, slightly greyish veil toward petal edges. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium strength, spicy character fragrance typical of classic hybrid teas; distinct enough to notice around seating areas and excellent in cut stems, while remaining refined and not overpowering in smaller spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Mostly absent or small hips; occasional fruit form around 10–16 mm in diameter, offering only limited autumn interest and ensuring the plant directs most of its energy into foliage and repeat flowering. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 3, USDA 6b); moderate resistance to black spot, mildew and rust, with good tolerance of heat and brief drought when soil preparation and watering are adequate. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Prefers a sunny site with well-prepared soil; medium maintenance with occasional pest and disease control, regular deadheading and annual pruning; recommended spacings 50–90 cm depending on use and planting density. |
The Scotsman™ offers upright structure, romantic mauve blooms and dependable repeat flowering on a resilient own-root plant that matures gracefully, making it a thoughtful, enduring choice for your garden.