MUSHIMARA – red climbing rose
Create a classic, welcoming front garden with velvety red blooms and a reliable climbing habit that clothes fences, arches and house walls with rich colour. This semi-double, medium-sized flowered rose offers remontant flushes through the season and a clear, pleasantly scented character, giving you weeks of display from early summer onwards. Glossy, dark green foliage forms a dense backdrop that helps the plant cope well even where you must manage heavier soils and improve drainage in wetter, exposed spots with strong winds. As an own-root plant it settles in steadily for a genuinely long-lived structure, able to regenerate if pruned harder in future years. With medium maintenance needs and average disease resistance, it fits busy families who want dependable performance rather than constant care. Expect firm establishment in the first year, stronger climbing shoots in the second, and full ornamental presence by the third season.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front-garden feature arch |
Use Mushimara to cover a metal or wooden arch by the gate or front path, where its deep red, medium-sized clusters create a smart, traditional welcome without needing constant attention. The medium maintenance level suits time-pressed beginners. |
| Wall or house-side trellis |
Trained on a sturdy trellis against a house wall, Mushimara’s 3.3–5 m height gives a tall, narrow curtain of velvety red, while own-root vigour helps it recover if some stems suffer winter damage. This is reassuring for cautious homeowners. |
| Fence and boundary softening |
Along a garden boundary, this climber quickly breaks up harsh fence lines with dense, glossy foliage and repeat crimson-red flowering, delivering a mature look without frequent replanting. A long-lived planting line benefits practical planners. |
| Pergola or walk-through structure |
On a pergola, Mushimara’s dark red, cup-shaped blooms and clear rosy fragrance create an intimate passageway, while the semi-double flowers keep the display light and airy overhead. This suits romantic, cottage-style garden enthusiasts. |
| Free-standing obelisk in a small bed |
In compact front gardens, a single obelisk with Mushimara gives strong vertical interest and colour without taking much ground space, ideal where lawns, drives and paths limit planting depth. This helps space-conscious urban gardeners. |
| Mixed cottage border background |
Planted at the back of a mixed border, Mushimara threads through perennials and shrubs, its rich red flowers pairing well with blues and silvers while foliage fills vertical gaps. The forgiving growth suits relaxed cottage-border stylists. |
| Robust planting for heavier UK soils |
Where clay or chalky ground needs careful preparation and good drainage, own-root Mushimara rewards the effort by establishing a durable framework of shoots that copes with exposed, windy conditions over many seasons. This reassures cautious garden starters. |
| Large container on patio or terrace |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container with a strong support, Mushimara offers a vertical accent of dark red colour close to seating areas, combining manageable size with fragrance and repeat flower. This is ideal for low-fuss patio-rose owners. |
Styling ideas
- Classic archway – Train Mushimara over a simple metal arch, underplant with lavender and nepeta for soft blues and scent contrast – perfect for lovers of traditional front-garden entrances.
- Cottage corner – Let it climb a timber trellis behind foxgloves, hardy geraniums and campanulas to build a layered, informal cottage look – ideal for relaxed, flower-rich family gardens.
- Crimson pergola – Pair Mushimara on a pergola with pale pink or white climbers for a multi-toned canopy above a seating area – suited to gardeners seeking a romantic summer retreat.
- Bold boundary – Combine it along a fence with Cotinus ‘Lilla’ and Liatris ‘Kobold’ to echo rich reds and purples in a coordinated scheme – appealing to colour-focused design enthusiasts.
- Patio vertical – Grow in a 50 litre pot with a slim obelisk, add low mounding herbs at the base for soft edging and seasonal scent – convenient for busy urban gardeners maximising limited space.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
MUSHIMARA – red climbing rose; ARS exhibition name Musimara®. Large-flowered climbing rose, exhibition climbing rose type, in the pharmaROSA ORIGINAL 2-litre own-root range. |
| Origin and breeding |
Parentage unknown; bred in the Netherlands, breeding year recorded as 1993, introduced commercially circa 1985, with initial distribution through Rose.it in Italy; detailed breeder data not available. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous large-flowered climber, 3.3–5 m high with 1.4–2.6 m spread; dense, glossy dark green foliage on moderately thorny shoots, forming a substantial vertical framework when given firm support. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped blooms with 17–25 petals, medium-sized at approximately 4–7 cm across, usually produced in clusters of 1–3 flowers per stem, offering a classic but not overly heavy appearance. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Full, velvety crimson-red flowers with cool undertone; colour remains deep from bud to full bloom, then shifts slightly towards brownish-red before fading; ARS code DR, RHS 53A; good repeat flowering in later flushes. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Moderate, clearly perceptible rosy fragrance, noticeable at close range, adding sensory interest without overpowering nearby seating areas; semi-double form gives limited but some accessibility for visiting pollinators. |
| Hip characteristics |
Generally low hip production; occasionally sets small, red, ellipsoid hips around 12–18 mm in diameter, adding discreet seasonal interest without significantly affecting flowering performance. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7, hardy in much of the UK and comparable to USDA zone 6b, tolerating approximately -21 to -18 °C; disease resistance moderate, with average susceptibility to black spot, mildew and rust. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best used on arches, pergolas, fences or through sturdy trees; plant 1.8–3 m apart depending on effect; maintenance medium, with occasional plant protection and regular tying-in and pruning of main canes. |
MUSHIMARA – red climbing rose offers velvety repeat flowers, vertical structure and reassuring hardiness on a durable own-root framework; consider it if you seek a long-term climber that rewards straightforward care.