QUICKSILVER – purple climbing rose - Kordes
Lavender blooms drift across sturdy walls and arches, creating a softly romantic display of pastel purple that suits classic British front gardens and cottage-style entrances. This large-flowered climber brings generously double, cupped blooms with a distinct, medium-strength fragrance, carried at eye level where you can enjoy it every day. On its own-root system it settles in reliably and builds a long-lived framework, giving you an easy, gradual progression from root establishment through leafy growth to full ornamental presence over several seasons. Dark foliage and sparsely thorned shoots make training and tying-in more pleasant, while its ability to cope with breezy sites near the house helps in gardens where wind and rain can be challenging. Ideal where you want a refined vertical accent that matures steadily with minimal complication, simply rewarding consistent watering and basic seasonal care for years of colour.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden rose arch over a path |
Its generous, cupped lavender blooms and moderate height make an inviting arch that frames the front path without overwhelming smaller gardens, giving you classic cottage charm with manageable size and reach for beginners. |
| Climbing feature on a sunny house wall |
This climber builds a stable, long-lived framework on its own roots, so once trained on wires it can flower for many years without needing replacement, suiting homeowners who want a lasting investment rather than short-lived displays for planners. |
| Screening on a fence between neighbouring gardens |
Dense, dark green foliage and clustered blooms create a soft visual screen that breaks up hard boundaries, giving privacy while still looking ornamental, especially where there is some shelter and regular care against disease for neighbours. |
| Pergola or walk-through structure by a seating area |
The medium-strength, pleasantly soft lavender-rose scent is best enjoyed close-up, so training it over a pergola by a bench lets the fragrance and pastel colour surround you on warm evenings, ideal for relaxed, scent-focused gardeners. |
| Statement rose in a mixed cottage border |
Its pastel lavender flowers blend effortlessly with whites, blues and soft pinks, allowing you to weave it through perennials for a harmonised cottage palette while the moderate flower size avoids clashing with nearby plants for style-conscious owners. |
| Vertical accent in a small urban family garden |
By growing up rather than out, it gives height, colour and scent without taking precious ground space, helping busy city gardeners create impact on tight plots using simple training and seasonal pruning for space-aware families. |
| Rose arch in exposed, breezy positions |
Once established, its climbing framework and own-root anchoring help it cope better with blustery, rain-swept sites, provided the soil drains reasonably, supporting front gardens that see frequent coastal-style wind and wet for practical-minded owners. |
| Large container or half-barrel near the front door |
Grown in a 40–50 litre container with regular watering and feeding, it offers a movable column of lavender blooms by the entrance, letting you enjoy colour and fragrance close to the house while keeping maintenance straightforward for busy starters. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Archway – Train Quicksilver over a narrow metal arch and underplant with white verbena and lavender for a soft, romantic entrance – ideal for lovers of traditional cottage paths.
- Pastel Facade – Fan it across trellis on a house wall, pairing with pale climbers and soft-grey foliage like Euonymus japonicus ‘Microphyllus’ – perfect for homeowners seeking gentle, coordinated frontage.
- Family Pergola – Let its sparsely thorned stems cover a seating pergola, mixing in clematis for extended colour while keeping access safe for children – suited to family gardens used daily.
- Urban Screen – Grow it along a boundary fence with upright grasses and white perennials to create a slim, elegant privacy screen – a smart choice for compact urban plots.
- Container Welcome – Plant in a 50‑litre half-barrel by the front door and guide stems up a simple obelisk, combining with seasonal bedding at the base – excellent for beginners wanting easy impact.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic | Data |
| Name and registration |
Climbing rose cultivar Quicksilver (registered as KORpucoblu), large-flowered climber type; commercial climbing rose, premium selection with verified authenticity for reliable, consistent garden performance. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Tim-Hermann Kordes, W. Kordes’ Söhne, Germany; unnamed seedling × unnamed seedling; bred 2004, registered 2015 and introduced 2016 by the originating nursery. |
| Awards and recognition |
Awarded a Certificate of Merit at the Australian National Rose Trials in 2022, indicating notable ornamental quality and garden performance under independent trial conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous climbing habit reaching about 180–300 cm high and 90–160 cm wide, with dense, slightly glossy dark green foliage and sparsely thorned shoots, suitable for walls, arches and fences. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, very double, cupped flowers with over 40 petals, produced mainly in clusters; remontant with a plentiful second flush, giving repeated seasonal displays when adequately watered and maintained. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Delicate pastel lavender to even, cool purple blooms with silvery-lilac tones; colour holds best in cooler conditions and may fade in strong heat, offering refined, variable shades through the season. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength, distinctly scented rose with a pleasantly soft, lavender-rose character; best appreciated at close range along paths, seating areas and entrances where blooms are near nose level. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose-hip formation is generally scant due to the very double flowers, though some small ellipsoid orange-red hips, around 9–15 mm, may develop occasionally towards the end of the season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7, hardy to about −26 to −23 °C (USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4); health requires attentive spraying as it is very susceptible to mildew, black spot and rust in typical damp UK conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best on sunny, well-drained sites with regular feeding and watering; allow 140–240 cm spacing, tie in new shoots promptly, and apply consistent disease prevention routines for reliable displays. |
Quicksilver Climbing rose KORpucoblu offers romantic lavender blooms, elegant height and a long-lived own-root framework that rewards steady, basic care; consider it if you want a graceful climbing focus with lasting character.