DREAMING SPIRES – yellow climbing rose – Mattock
Let the golden tones of Dreaming Spires bring classic cottage-garden character to your walls, arches and pergolas with a remarkably reliable climber that repeats generously through summer. This own-root plant settles steadily into typical British garden conditions, coping well with breezy, damp spells near the coast and heavier soils when planted with decent drainage. Semi-double, mid-sized blooms in rich yellow clusters age gently to cream, so the display always looks soft rather than brash, while the strong fresh, fruity fragrance carries beautifully around paths and seating areas. Over the first few years it builds its roots, then extends its shoots, and by about the third season it shows its full ornamental potential along your chosen support, with dense dark-green foliage forming a long-lived, low-fuss vertical feature.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front-garden arch or arbour |
Its moderate height and dense foliage make a welcoming arch that feels generous but not overbearing in a typical front garden. Repeating yellow clusters and a strong fruity scent frame gateways or paths elegantly for appearance-focused beginners. |
| Sunny house wall or garage facade |
The upright climbing habit and 3–4,5 m height are ideal for clothing plain brick or render, while the own-root plant builds a stable framework that can be cut back hard if ever needed and regrows reliably for cautious new gardeners. |
| Pergola beside terrace or seating area |
Medium-sized, semi-double flowers held in clusters provide colour without excessive shading, and the clearly noticeable fragrance is best appreciated near seating, creating a relaxed evening spot for busy urban garden owners. |
| Small cottage-style mixed border backdrop |
Its rich yellow to creamy flowers combine naturally with blues and purples in narrow beds, while medium maintenance and moderate disease resistance suit low-input borders where tidy, repeat colour matters for hobby gardeners. |
| Informal screen between neighbouring gardens |
With a spread up to 2,7 m and dense, glossy foliage, it forms a soft, living screen on trellis or wires, providing privacy and seasonal flowers without needing rigorous pruning, reassuring time-poor family gardeners. |
| Training along a sturdy fence line |
Flexible climbing stems can be tied horizontally along wires on a fence, encouraging more flowering side shoots; most spent blooms fall away by themselves, keeping the line presentable with minimal deadheading for practical-minded beginners. |
| Large feature container by the front door |
In a large 40–50 litre planter with a trellis or obelisk, it gives vertical colour where soil is poor or paved, and the own-root form settles and thickens steadily rather than exhausting itself quickly, appealing to design-conscious homeowners. |
| Raised bed in heavier or wetter soils |
Placed in a raised bed with improved soil, it handles typical British moisture and wind better, with own-root resilience giving long-term structure and flowering reliability even where drainage is challenging for cautious novice gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-arch – Train Dreaming Spires over a metal or wooden arch, underplanting with clustered bellflower and hardy geraniums for a soft cottage look – ideal for lovers of classic front-garden entrances.
- Golden-pergola – Clothe a simple pergola with this climber and add pots of lavender and salvia beneath to echo the yellow and blue contrast – perfect for homeowners wanting a cosy seating area without complex planting.
- Warm-wall – Fan-train it on wires across a sunny brick wall, pairing with Caryopteris ‘Grand Bleu’ and ornamental grasses at the base – suited to urban gardeners seeking neat structure and long-season colour.
- Soft-screen – Use repeated plants along a boundary trellis with Rudbeckia and hardy ferns in front to create a flowering, semi-formal screen – good for families who want privacy and cheerful colour with modest upkeep.
- Statement-pot – Plant one own-root specimen in a 50 litre container with a slim obelisk, surrounding the base with trailing thyme and violas – a smart choice for small gardens or renters relying on portable vertical accents.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Dreaming Spires, climbing rose; ARS exhibition name Dreaming Spires; large-flowered climber from the Mattock range, offered here as an own-root, container-grown garden rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by John Stewart Mattock, Mattock Roses, Oxford; parentage ‘Buccaneer’ × ‘Arthur Bell’; introduced and registered in the United Kingdom in 1973. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous climber reaching about 3,0–4,5 m high and 1,6–2,7 m wide, with moderately thorny stems and dense, dark green, slightly glossy foliage forming a substantial vertical framework. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cupped blooms with around 13–25 petals, produced in clusters on medium-length stems; flower size medium at approximately 4–7 cm across, with remontant, abundant repeat flushes. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep, rich yellow with a faint amber tone; buds golden with bronzed tinge; flowers fade gently to creamy edges; colour holds well, lighter in strong sun, richer in cooler conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Distinct, clearly noticeable scent with a fresh, fruity character; fragrance strength strong enough to be appreciated on warm, still days around paths, terraces and seating areas. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set generally low due to semi-double flowers; when present, hips are egg-shaped, 12–18 mm in diameter, orange-red and decorative but limited in quantity and display. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7; USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); moderate tolerance to drought and heat; disease resistance moderate to common fungal leaf problems. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; suitable for arches, pergolas, walls and trellis; plant 1,4–2,35 m apart depending on use, with support and regular tying-in of new shoots. |
DREAMING SPIRES offers fragrant repeat flowering, adaptable climbing coverage and long-lived own-root reliability, making it a thoughtful choice for creating enduring vertical interest in a family garden.