Don Juan – dark-red climbing rose
This classic climbing Hybrid Tea offers romantic arches of large, velvety dark-red blooms, bringing a dramatic focal point to modest British gardens without demanding expert care. Strong, reliable growth and good disease tolerance make it a genuinely practical choice for homeowners who want a luxuriant rose wall on a pergola, fence or house-front in typical UK conditions, even where you must cope with heavier soils and need to improve drainage in wetter spots. The strongly scented, tea-fruity fragrance adds a luxurious note to summer evenings, while repeat flowering keeps the display continuous from early summer well into autumn. Own-root plants build up steadily for a long, stable life in the garden, becoming more impressive as they mature. In year one it concentrates on roots, in year two on taller shoots, and by year three it delivers full ornamental value with satisfying coverage. With sensible watering in dry spells and light seasonal pruning, Don Juan rewards you with a reliably striking presence that suits both beginners and experienced enthusiasts alike.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front-garden wall or house façade |
Trains easily against a warm wall, producing large, velvety dark-red flowers that give a smart, welcoming look from the street. Its reliable repeat blooming keeps the display going with modest care, ideal where you want impact without fuss for the busy homeowner. |
| Pergola or arbour for seating areas |
Long canes and strongly scented blooms create a shaded, intimate seating spot as the plant matures, with fragrance drifting through on warm evenings. Medium maintenance needs and good general disease resistance help keep the structure attractive over many years for the outdoor entertainer. |
| Fencelines and boundary screening |
Its climbing habit and 2.4–3.8 m height allow you to clothe fences with rich foliage and flowers, softening boundaries and adding privacy. Own-root vigour supports long-term regeneration after pruning, keeping the screen full and reliable for the practical gardener. |
| Specimen climber in a small mixed border |
Works well as a vertical accent emerging from a compact planting of perennials or shrubs, adding height without taking up too much ground space. The deep red colour partners classic cottage shades and stays attractive as the plant gradually fills its allotted space for the design-conscious beginner. |
| Cottage-style rose and perennial combinations |
Pair its rich dark-red blooms with softer companions such as lady’s mantle or bellflowers for a relaxed, traditional cottage effect. Repeat flowering gives season-long colour without complicated regimes, fitting well with informal, easy-care borders for the cottage-garden lover. |
| Partially shaded city and courtyard gardens |
Tolerates partial shade, so it performs respectably where light is limited by neighbouring houses or walls. Reasonable disease resistance and straightforward pruning keep the plant manageable in tight spaces, suiting the needs of the urban gardener. |
| Large container on terrace or patio (min. 40–50 litres) |
In a generous, well-drained container with regular watering and feeding, it offers dramatic flowers and fragrance close to seating and doors. Own-root durability means it copes better with periodic hard pruning and repotting, providing lasting enjoyment for the balcony and patio owner. |
| Cut flowers from the family garden |
The large, very double blooms and strong tea-fruity scent make excellent vase material, so a single plant can supply striking stems through the season. With sensible watering in hot spells and basic deadheading, you gain both garden show and indoor bouquets for the home flower arranger. |
Styling ideas
- Classic-entrance – Train Don Juan around a front door with neutral masonry, underplanted with evergreen groundcover honeysuckle, for a formal yet welcoming approach – ideal for image-conscious homeowners.
- Cottage-arch – Cover a metal or timber arch with Don Juan and frothy Alchemilla mollis, creating a soft-edged, romantic gateway between garden rooms – perfect for lovers of traditional cottage gardens.
- Evening-arbour – Combine this scented climber over a seating arbour with pale campanulas beneath, giving contrast to the dark-red blooms and enhancing twilight fragrance – suited to those who relax outdoors after work.
- Compact-border – Use Don Juan as a single tall accent in a slim side border, with low perennials at the base to keep maintenance simple while maximising height – good for narrow, space-conscious plots.
- Patio-feature – Grow in a large 50-litre container with discreet supports, surrounding the base with seasonal bedding for a changing carpet of colour – attractive for renters or anyone avoiding major hard landscaping.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Don Juan – climbing Hybrid Tea, large-flowered climber; ARS exhibition name Don Juan, unregistered cultivar, marketed as Don Juan Climbing rose Don Juan in the climbing rose group. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Michele Malandrone in Italy, 1958; parentage ‘New Dawn’ × ‘New Yorker’. First distributed by Jackson & Perkins Co. (USA), widely established as a classic dark-red climbing rose. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Climbing habit, approximately 2.4–3.8 m high and 1.5–2.6 m spread. Foliage of medium density, green (approx. RHS 139A). Densely thorned canes; medium self-cleaning, some spent blooms require later removal. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, cup-shaped blooms with 40+ petals and clustered inflorescences. Large flower size (about 7–10 cm), repeat flowering with a notably abundant second flush under normal garden care. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep, velvety dark-red flowers; outer petals RHS 187A, inner 53B. Colour holds well, fading only slightly in strong sun, often deepening toward a blackish tone before ageing, giving a rich, dramatic display. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, easily noticeable scent with a rich tea-fruity character. Highly double flowers conceal stamens, offering mainly ornamental rather than pollinator support, but providing excellent sensory value near paths and seating. |
| Hip characteristics |
Sparse hip production; occasionally forms small spherical hips 12–18 mm, red (RHS 43A). Hips are generally incidental to display and do not significantly affect the ornamental value or maintenance needs of the plant. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Good overall disease resistance: resistant to powdery mildew and rust, moderate against black spot. Hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3) with reliable performance in most UK regions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to pergolas, arbours, fences and walls, and for cut flowers. Maintenance low–medium; prune to shape, deadhead for repeat, and use occasional black spot treatments where pressure is high; tolerates partial shade. |
Don Juan offers velvety dark-red blooms, strong fragrance and repeat flowering on a long-lived own-root climber, making it a confident choice for those planning a lasting, easy-care rose feature.