Summertime – yellow climbing rose – Warner
Sunlit arches, walls and porches come alive with the cheerful, creamy-yellow clusters of Summertime, a compact climbing rose that fits effortlessly into classic British front gardens and cottage-style borders. Bred by Christopher H. Warner and holder of the RHS Award of Garden Merit, it combines reliable repeat flowering with low intervention care, suiting busy households and beginners who simply want a rose that works. Its medium-height growth and dense, dark green foliage create a neat, tidy screen on fences and trellises, while the medium, soft fruity fragrance adds gentle charm near doors, patios and seating. As an own-root rose it develops into a stable, long-lived plant that regenerates well after pruning, ideal where you need dependable structure and colour even in areas with challenging drainage and heavier soils. In the first year it concentrates on roots, the second on framework shoots, and by the third season it displays its full ornamental value with abundant, creamy blooms and healthy foliage. Its moderate size makes it very suitable for trained forms in containers of 40–50 litres or more, so you can enjoy vertical interest on balconies and small paved gardens. With good disease resistance, moderate drought tolerance if watered regularly, and a naturally compact, manageable habit, Summertime offers an easy way to introduce a classic climbing rose to family gardens without complex horticulture.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden house wall or sunny façade |
Summertime’s manageable 1.8–3 m height is ideal for clothing typical UK house walls without overpowering windows or gutters. Its dense dark foliage and creamy-yellow, semi-double clusters give an ordered, welcoming look with minimal pruning demands for busy homeowners. |
| Small pergola, arch or gateway |
The flexible climbing growth and relatively moderate spread suit compact arches over paths or gateways, creating a light canopy of soft yellow blooms with a medium, sweet-fruity scent at head height, while keeping maintenance simple for aesthetics-focused beginners. |
| Fence or trellis in a family back garden |
Regular repeat flowering and good disease resistance make it easy to train along fences and trellises, forming a tidy green-and-yellow backdrop that screens neighbouring plots yet stays manageable for basic once-a-year pruning by hobby gardeners. |
| Large container on patio, terrace or balcony |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container with a sturdy obelisk or trellis, Summertime offers vertical colour where soil is limited, its compact climber habit and own-root stamina providing long-term structure and blooms for urban garden owners. |
| Mixed cottage-style border with perennials |
The warm creamy-yellow flowers blend naturally with blues and whites, pairing well with plants such as yarrow or bluebeard, while the climber can be lightly tied to discreet supports, adding height and romance without demanding complex care from cottage-garden lovers. |
| Accent rose near seating, door or pathway |
Clusters of medium-sized flowers and a clearly noticeable, soft sweet-fruity fragrance work particularly well near benches, front doors or path junctions, providing sensory interest through the season with modest tying-in needs for fragrance appreciators. |
| Structural feature in small to medium rose schemes |
As an own-root, AGM-winning climber with good disease resistance, it forms a reliable framework over time, regenerating well from pruning cuts and coping with typical British conditions, including heavier soils where drainage is improved, reassuring long-term planners. |
| Low-maintenance vertical highlight for beginners |
With low maintenance requirements, repeat flowering and a moderate ultimate size, Summertime offers an approachable first climber: basic tying-in, watering during dry spells and light annual pruning are usually enough for confident results for first-time rose growers. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Archway – Train Summertime over a simple metal or wooden arch and underplant with lavender and catmint for a soft, traditional approach – ideal for cottage-garden lovers seeking romantic structure.
- Sunny Façade – Space plants along a south- or west-facing house wall with discreet trellis panels to frame windows in gentle yellow tones – suited to homeowners wanting a tidy, classic front garden.
- Patio Obelisk – Grow one plant in a 50-litre terracotta pot with a slender obelisk, adding thyme and trailing lobelia at the base – perfect for urban gardeners maximising height on paved spaces.
- Family Fence Line – Use at intervals along a garden fence with hardy shrubs and ornamental grasses in front to create a soft, low-care screen – good for busy families who prefer simple seasonal tidy-ups.
- Mixed Border Accent – Combine with bluebeard, yarrow hybrids and white perennials, using a light trellis to lift flowering stems through the planting – attractive for design-conscious beginners building gentle vertical interest.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Summertime – yellow climbing rose, miniature climber; registered as CHEWlarmoll, ARS exhibition name Summertime, exhibition and patio climber within the climbing rose commercial group. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Christopher H. Warner in the United Kingdom in 2003 from ‘Laura Ford’ × ‘Golden Future’; introduced and initially distributed by Warner Roses in 2005. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the RHS Award of Garden Merit (2012), indicating proven garden performance, reliability and general ease of cultivation under typical UK conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Climbing habit reaching approximately 1.8–3 m high with 0.8–1.4 m spread; dense, slightly glossy dark green foliage, moderately thorny stems, suitable for walls, fences and small garden structures. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cupped flowers with 13–25 petals, medium-sized clusters (around 4–7 cm), borne in sprays; remontant, with particularly abundant second flush after the main early summer bloom. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Light, warm creamy-yellow flowers: butter-yellow centres on opening, fading to ivory-cream edges; ARS ly, RHS 4D outer and 8C inner; colour lightens in strong sun but overall retention is good. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength, clearly noticeable scent with soft sweet-fruity character; pleasant but not overpowering, making it suitable for planting close to seating areas, doors and well-used paths. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally sparse; occasional small spherical orange-red hips, 5–9 mm in diameter, may develop and add minor seasonal interest without significantly affecting flowering. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Good disease resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; hardy approximately to −21 to −18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7), with moderate heat and drought tolerance needing regular watering in dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions on walls, fences, pergolas or in large containers; plant 140–250 cm apart depending on use; prefers well-drained soil, with annual pruning and tying-in for an orderly climber. |
Summertime Climbing rose CHEWlarmoll offers compact height, repeat creamy-yellow flowering and reliable disease resistance as a durable own-root climber, making it a thoughtful choice for long-term structure and colour in family gardens.