Kent Cover® Towne & Country® groundcover rose – pharmaROSA® ORIGINAL 2-litre own-root
Groundcover roses like Kent Cover® bring reliable white colour and a low, spreading habit that quickly carpets the soil in tidy, flower-filled growth. Its dense, glossy foliage helps to suppress weeds, while the semi-double flowers open wide to reveal stamens that appeal to visiting pollinators. Bred for resilience and awarded the RHS Award of Garden Merit, it copes well with typical British conditions, including occasional strong winds and wet weather in more exposed gardens by the coast. Maintenance remains straightforward: light pruning, basic watering and the natural, partly self-cleaning habit are usually enough to keep it looking neat. As an own-root plant it settles in steadily—roots in the first year, more shoots in the second, then full ornamental impact by year three—developing into a long-lived, balanced structure that suits busy householders who simply want a dependable front-garden performer.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden groundcover for tidy kerb appeal |
Kent Cover® forms a low, spreading mat that quickly covers bare soil and softens hard edges along drives and paths, giving an ordered look without constant attention, ideal for householders seeking an easy-care entrance feature for their home, particularly beginners. |
| Low-maintenance edging to lawns and paths |
The compact height and naturally rounded habit create a clear visual boundary while remaining easy to step over or mow around, needing only occasional trimming to keep in line, suiting those who prefer simple, practical structure around lawn and paving, especially busy-owners. |
| Small rose bed with season-long white flowers |
Planted in groups of three to five, the remontant flowering provides a long sequence of snow-white blooms that stay clean in sun, giving a calm, unified colour block that works well with most house colours and paving materials for gardeners wanting reliable seasonal display, notably aesthetes. |
| Cottage-style mixes with perennials |
The modest height and flat, semi-double flowers weave easily among foxgloves and bellflowers, acting as a bright, ground-level layer beneath taller cottage plants while still leaving room for perennials to shine, making it suitable for informal schemes sought by classic cottage-garden enthusiasts. |
| Urban and small courtyard plantings |
This variety tolerates typical town conditions such as reflected heat, passing traffic and limited soil depth, yet keeps its foliage dense and presentable, helping to green paved spaces with minimal work, an advantage for compact front gardens and courtyards managed by time-pressed city residents. |
| Stabilising gently sloping banks |
The broad spread and branching habit help knit the surface of mild slopes together, shading soil to reduce moisture loss and discouraging weeds, while still offering attractive flowering, providing a practical yet decorative solution for sloping front gardens overseen by pragmatic home owners. |
| Large containers and planters (40–50 litres+) |
In a generous container it forms a cascading mound of white blooms over rich foliage; the own-root character ensures it refills the pot evenly over time, letting you refresh compost periodically while keeping the same plant, a benefit for pot-focused balcony and patio gardeners. |
| Long-lasting, low-effort planting for family spaces |
As the own-root plant matures it maintains its form without complicated pruning, renewing shoots from the base and remaining stable year after year, even with basic care and occasional holiday neglect, a reassuring choice for families wanting dependable structure around everyday life. |
Styling ideas
- White-ribbon edging – line a front path with a repeating row of Kent Cover® for a crisp white border that frames paving and gravel neatly – ideal for owners who like simple, clean geometry without heavy upkeep.
- Cottage underplanting – use Kent Cover® at the feet of foxgloves and bellflowers to fill gaps with low white blossom – suited to those who enjoy romantic, layered borders but want the soil itself largely hidden.
- Urban courtyard carpet – group several plants in a raised bed to soften brick and stone with dense foliage and blooms – perfect for city gardeners wanting greenery that copes with hard landscaping and limited time.
- Soft slope solution – plant on a gentle bank in loose drifts so the mounded growth and white flowers draw the eye while covering soil – useful for families turning awkward, sloping corners into easy-to-manage green features.
- Container focal mound – set one plant in a 50‑litre terracotta pot near the front door, allowing stems to arch slightly over the rim – appealing to those who favour a single, calm statement rather than complex pot combinations.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Groundcover rose from the Towne & Country® collection; registered as POUlcov and marketed as Kent Cover®; verified cultivar identity for consistent performance in family gardens. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in Denmark in 1985 by L. P. Olesen and M. N. Olesen for Poulsen Roser A/S, introduced after 2001; selected for reliable groundcover habit and garden performance across temperate regions. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holder of the RHS Award of Garden Merit (2001) with multiple international trial honours from 1989 onwards, confirming dependable garden value and proven performance under varied conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Low, spreading shrub reaching about 50–80 cm in height with an 80–130 cm spread; dense, dark green, glossy foliage and moderate prickles create an effective, weed-softening groundcover canopy. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, flat flowers approximately 0.5–1.5 inches across, appearing in clusters; around 13–25 petals give a light, open character with good visibility of stamens and a generous repeat flush. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure snow-white flowers with a soft creamy or buttery hint near the centre; colour holds well in sun, fading only slightly towards beige-white, maintaining a clean white impression throughout the bloom cycle. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, restrained scent with a delicate muscat-like note; noticeable close up but not overpowering, making it suitable for entrance areas and small gardens where strong perfume is not always desired. |
| Hip characteristics |
After flowering, some blooms form small, spherical, red-orange hips about 5–8 mm in diameter; they appear occasionally in autumn and add discreet seasonal interest without heavy deadheading demands. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated to around –32 to –29 °C (USDA 4b, RHS H7; Swedish Zone 5); average heat and drought tolerance, needing watering in extended dry spells, and suitable for most UK regions including colder inland sites. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best planted 85–95 cm apart for edging or mass cover; tolerates partial shade and typical urban conditions; low-maintenance needs with light pruning and routine watering to support repeat flowering. |
Kent Cover® offers season-long white groundcover, urban-tolerant resilience and straightforward maintenance in a long-lived own-root form, making it a thoughtful choice if you would like a neat, enduring rose carpet with minimal effort.