ADALINALU – pink climbing rose – Adam
ADALINALU is a refined large-flowered climbing rose for pergolas, walls and arches, offering a reliably floriferous display of mid-pink clusters that repeat through the season. Its compact spread and upright climbing habit make it easy to guide on trellis or wires, helping you create a classic cottage-style focal point even in smaller family gardens. The dense, glossy foliage frames the flowers attractively, echoing traditional British front-garden rose arches. As an own-root plant it forms a naturally balanced framework that matures steadily, giving you a long-lived, regenerating structure with stable ornamental value. In the first years you can expect roots to establish, then stronger shoots, and finally full garden impact as the rose settles in. Container-grown in a 2-litre pot, it is straightforward to plant and train, though in humid, changeable weather it will benefit from regular health care and considered siting to cope with wetter, windier garden conditions typical of exposed sites. With its award-winning blooms, ADALINALU suits gardeners who want a statement climber that rewards simple, consistent attention without complex techniques.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Pergola over seating or dining area |
Ideal where you want a romantic, overhead canopy of pink clusters cascading at eye level. The repeat-flowering, large, very full blooms give a long season of colour, turning a simple pergola into a refined focal point enjoyed on summer evenings – perfect for the aesthetically minded beginner. |
| Front-garden arch or gate entrance |
The upright climbing habit and moderate spread allow it to cover a rose arch neatly without overwhelming narrow paths. Its award-winning flowers create a welcoming entrance that feels classically British, giving strong visual return from a small footprint – well suited to style-conscious homeowners. |
| Sunny house wall with trellis or wires |
Trains easily on horizontal wires, forming a permanent flowering framework that enhances brick or render. The own-root form helps the plant re-shoot if pruned back, supporting a long-lived wall display that matures steadily year after year – reassuring for long-term planning gardeners. |
| Compact family garden border backdrop |
Its tall height but relatively narrow spread makes an effective flowering screen at the back of smaller borders. The dense, dark foliage creates a rich green backdrop for perennials, while the mid-pink blooms add gentle structure without visual clutter – attractive to space-limited urban gardeners. |
| Mixed cottage-style bed with perennials |
The soft, medium-pink flowers blend harmoniously with classics such as catmint, foxgloves and hardy geraniums. Clustered, cup-shaped blooms provide rhythm and repetition, tying mixed plantings together and giving a refined cottage look with simple training and tying – ideal for informal-style enthusiasts. |
| Decorative screen on fence or boundary |
Planted at intervals along a fence, it creates vertical accents of colour and dense foliage, softening hard boundaries. Over time the own-root plants build a stable, woody framework that recovers well from pruning, giving a durable, living screen for family gardens – reassuring for privacy-focused owners. |
| Large container near doorway or terrace |
In a substantial pot of at least 40–50 litres with a sturdy obelisk or trellis, it delivers height and colour where ground planting is limited. The compact footprint and repeat flowering make it an excellent choice to frame doors or patios with a refined, ornamental presence – convenient for busy city-dwellers. |
| Sheltered, well-aerated rose feature |
Best placed where air moves freely and foliage can dry quickly, helping support regular plant protection and limit disease build-up in damper regions, while also suiting wetter, windier gardens that challenge many roses. Thoughtful siting and basic care bring the full benefit of its show-quality blooms – supportive for cautious starters. |
Styling ideas
- Romantic archway – Train ADALINALU over a metal or wooden arch, underplanting with lavender and hardy geraniums for a soft, scented approach – for lovers of classic cottage entrances.
- Pretty pergola – Let its clusters drape from pergola rafters, combined with clematis for layered flowering at different heights – for those seeking a refined outdoor room feel.
- Compact screen – Space plants along a low fence, weaving stems through wires to form a vertical pink screen – for families wanting gentle privacy without heavy structures.
- Cottage mix – Pair with foxgloves, catmint and Alchemilla in a small border where its mid-pink cups tie varied shapes together – for gardeners who enjoy relaxed, informal colour.
- Statement container – Grow in a large, 50‑litre pot with an obelisk by the front door, accenting with trailing ivy and heucheras – for urban owners maximising limited ground space.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Large-flowered climbing rose; registered as ADAlinalu, marketed as Adalinalu NIRPORIZON ADAlinalu, an ornamental climber bred for garden and structural use on arches, pergolas and walls. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Michel Adam, Roses Adam, Liffré, France, from unknown parentage; breeding completed 2014, introduced 2016 through NIRP International, representing modern European climbing rose selection. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated climber: gold medals Madrid 2014 and Saverne 2018, first prize climber Lyon 2014, double recognition at Bagatelle 2017 including first prize, plus Grand Prix de la Rose SNHF award. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous climbing habit to 220–340 cm with 35–65 cm spread, moderately thorny shoots and dense, glossy dark green foliage, forming a relatively narrow vertical column ideal for trained garden structures. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, cup-shaped, very full double blooms with 40+ petals, produced mainly in clusters. Remontant, with a generous second flush extending ornamental value across the main growing season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Medium pink overall (RHS 65C outer, 65D inner), buds open dark then fade through mid-pink to pale pastel tones. Colour retention moderate, with a fresh, uniform appearance and slightly matt petal surface. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Displays a mild rosy fragrance, subtle rather than dominant. Very double, compact blooms limit pollen access, so the variety is primarily decorative rather than pollinator-focused in most garden situations. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally light due to the very double flower form; when present, hips are small, spherical, orange-red, typically 6–10 mm in diameter, adding occasional late-season interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3) but very susceptible to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, requiring conscientious preventive plant protection in many gardens. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny, well-aerated positions with fertile, drained soil; suited to pergolas, arches, posts, fences and walls. Needs regular pruning, tying-in and plant health care for reliable, high-quality flowering. |
ADALINALU offers award-winning pink clusters, a space-efficient climbing habit and a regenerating own-root framework that rewards steady care; consider it if you want a long-lived feature rose with refined impact.