AUSCLUB – pink English rose – Austin
This David Austin shrub from the English Rose Collection offers the classic, romantic charm of a cottage-style front garden in a form that is genuinely easy to live with. Its bushy, rounded habit and dense, glossy foliage build a naturally shapely shrub that slots neatly into small borders and around-the-house beds, even where breezy, wetter weather calls for reassuring stability and resilience in exposed gardens. Large, rosette blooms in a refined clear pink open repeatedly through the season, creating an enduring colour focus with each cluster of very double flowers. The petals carry a medium-strength, sweetly fresh fragrance, making this a rewarding choice near paths and seating where you will pass close by. As an own-root plant in the pharmaROSA® ORIGINAL 2-litre range, it develops steadily into a long-lived, well-balanced shrub, giving you dependable flowering structure without complex pruning. With sensible watering and feeding, the simple “roots, then shoots, then full display” development arc over three seasons leads to a mature, reliable bush. Recommended spacings make it very practical for low, informal hedges, while the long, elegant stems and durable petal substance lend themselves to home cutting for vases indoors.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden specimen by the entrance |
The rounded, bushy habit builds into a naturally tidy shrub that frames doorways and paths without demanding intricate pruning, giving reliable structure in compact family plots. Well suited to busy but style-conscious homeowners |
| Small mixed border with perennials |
Its season-long repeat flowering supplies a steady run of pastel pink rosettes that weave gently through herbaceous planting, keeping the border visually active between perennial peaks. Ideal for aesthetics-led gardening beginners |
| Low informal hedge along a path or drive |
Recommended hedge spacings create a soft, continuous line of foliage and bloom, with moderate maintenance and straightforward trimming, giving a cottage-style boundary that is easy to keep in order. Practical for relaxed front-garden owners |
| Feature rose near a seating area |
The medium-strength, sweetly fresh scent and repeated flushes of full, rosette flowers make this an excellent companion to benches and patios, where its fragrance can be appreciated on everyday use. Attractive for scent-loving garden users |
| Bed grouped in 3–5 plants |
Planting in small drifts builds a cohesive block of colour and foliage that reads as one generous shrub mass, yet still remains manageable, supporting an easy-care, unified look in modest-sized plots. Best for family-scale garden layouts |
| Cutting corner for home arrangements |
Large, very double blooms on sufficiently long stems suit informal indoor vases; regular cutting encourages further flowering while the plant maintains a stable frame, adding value beyond the border. Appealing to home-flower arranging enthusiasts |
| Own-root long-term structural planting |
As an own-root rose it forms its bush naturally in position, regenerating from the base over time, giving a durable, well-anchored presence for long-lived beds that still ask relatively little care. Reassuring for long-horizon garden planners |
| Sheltered bed in wetter, breezier sites |
In gardens where wind and rain are frequent, its bushy frame and dense, glossy foliage offer a stable anchor that copes well once established, provided soil drainage and watering are sensibly managed. Suitable for exposed yet design-conscious gardeners |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-hedge – Line a path with a loose row of plants, underplanted with hardy geraniums to soften the base while the rose forms a reliable flowering hedge – ideal for cottage-style front-garden owners
- Pastel-focus – Combine with soft blues and lilacs such as Nepeta and lavender to emphasise the refined pink colour and repeat flowers – suited to colour-coordinating design-conscious beginners
- Scented-seat – Place one or two shrubs close to a bench, backed by evergreen structure, so the sweetly fresh fragrance can be enjoyed on everyday use – perfect for relaxation-seeking homeowners
- Group-impact – Plant a trio in a small island bed to read as one rounded mass of foliage and bloom, giving strong visual presence from multiple directions – good for small-plot family gardens
- Cutting-corner – Dedicate a sunny border section where several bushes supply full, double blooms for vases, interplanted with airy grasses for contrast – attractive to home floristry enthusiasts
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Ausclub is a shrub from the English Rose Collection, registered in 1995, marketed as Kathryn Morley and AUSCLUB – pink English rose – Austin, in the romantic English rose commercial group. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by David C. H. Austin in the United Kingdom in 1990 from ‘Mary Rose’ × ‘Chaucer’; introduced after 1995 by David Austin Roses Ltd. as a romantically styled garden and landscape shrub. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Forms a bushy, well-branched shrub 90–150 cm high and 90–135 cm wide with dense, dark green, glossy foliage and moderate prickliness, providing a full, rounded outline once established. |
| Flower morphology |
Bears large, very double rosette blooms with over 40 petals, typically in clusters, sized around 2.75–3.95 inches; remontant with abundant second flushes through the main growing season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft clear pink blooms, ARS LP, RHS 65C–65D, opening creamy-pink and fading toward pearly, almost whitish edges; colour retention is moderate, giving a gentle, translucent pastel effect in sun. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Possesses a noticeable, medium-strength, sweetly fresh scent suited to paths and seating areas; primarily valued as an ornamental rose rather than for culinary or cosmetic fragrance uses. |
| Hip characteristics |
Very double flowers set few hips; where formed they are small, spherical, 8–12 mm in diameter and red, adding only modest autumn interest rather than being a primary ornamental feature. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4); shows resistance to powdery mildew and black spot, with moderate rust susceptibility, needing regular watering in dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny beds, hedges or specimen positions at 90–170 cm spacing; requires moderate maintenance and some plant protection, with regular moisture and feeding for strongest flowering performance. |
Ausclub offers a bushy, long-lived shrub with repeat pastel-pink flowering and gentle fragrance, and as an own-root rose it settles into a stable garden feature over time, making it a thoughtful choice for enduring family borders.