CONSTANCE SPRY – pink climbing rose – Austin
Indulge in the romantic charm of CONSTANCE SPRY, a classic English climbing rose ideal for pergolas, arbours and cottage-style fences in the family garden. Her large, very double, mid-pink rosettes and abundant clusters create a generous first-summer display, filling the air with a myrrh fragrance that is rich, nostalgic and easily noticed from a distance. Bred by David Austin, this vigorous climber quickly clothes supports with dense, light-green foliage, while her proven resistant health keeps maintenance pleasantly simple. As an own-root plant she offers dependable longevity, with secure regrowth from the base if stems are damaged and a stable appearance over many years. Once established, her strong framework anchors well, suiting gardens that experience frequent winds and unsettled weather. Over time, you will see roots settle in the first year, framework build in the second, and the full storybook spectacle unfold by the third. Her edible, glowing hips add seasonality to autumn borders and lend a soft, traditional feel to any “girly” English-country planting.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Pergola or arbour over a seating area |
Large, once-flowering clusters and a very strong myrrh scent make this rose perfect for creating a romantic “afternoon tea” canopy over benches or garden furniture, with minimal annual pruning needed for shape – ideal for the busy urban garden owner. |
| Family garden fence or boundary climber |
The vigorous, upright habit and dense foliage quickly cover fences, providing an attractive, traditional-looking boundary that stays healthy thanks to strong disease resistance, so you spend more time enjoying and less time spraying – perfect for the low-maintenance-minded homeowner. |
| Feature rose on a house wall or garage |
Height to around 3–4 m allows the plant to frame doors or windows in classic cottage style; its strong framework and secure anchoring cope well even in exposed gardens that regularly experience blustery coastal-style winds – reassuring for the weather-conscious gardener. |
| Traditional cottage-style mixed border |
The soft mid-pink rosettes harmonise beautifully with herbs, perennials and kitchen-garden plantings, while good disease resistance and low routine care make it easy to blend into borders without complicated rose schedules – attractive for the traditional cottage-garden lover. |
| Own-root long-term specimen in the ground |
As an own-root rose it builds strength gradually from below, regrowing reliably from the base and avoiding graft-related issues, so the plant keeps its character and flowering quality for many years in a settled spot – ideal for the long-view garden planner. |
| Large container on terrace or courtyard |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container with good drainage, this climber can be trained on an obelisk or wall trellis, giving dramatic height and fragrance even where borders are limited, with only light pruning and feeding each year – convenient for the space-limited balcony or patio owner. |
| Cut flowers for special occasions |
The large, very double blooms and powerful fragrance make memorable indoor arrangements; although it flowers once, the concentrated flush provides plenty of stems in its season, ideal for summer parties, weddings or anniversaries – appealing to the home flower arranger. |
| Autumn interest and wildlife-friendly corner |
After flowering, abundant orange-red hips develop, offering colour, edible use and a food source for birds; combined with pollinator-attracting flowers, this supports a more nature-friendly family garden with subtle seasonal change – perfect for the wildlife-conscious family gardener. |
Styling ideas
- Tea-Arbour Romance – Train CONSTANCE SPRY over a wooden arbour with gravel underfoot and a small bistro set, pairing with low catmint and creeping bugle for a soft, hazy edge – for lovers of leisurely afternoon tea in the garden.
- Cottage Kitchen Fence – Let the rose ramble along a sunny fence behind raised vegetable beds, interplanted with Japanese sedge and herbs to echo a working yet decorative kitchen garden – for families who enjoy home-grown produce with charm.
- Front-Door Welcome – Use as a framed arch over the front path, its once-a-year mass of pink rosettes creating a memorable welcome above clipped box or lavender – for homeowners wanting classic English curb appeal.
- Storybook Corner – Combine the climber on an obelisk with pastel perennials and old-fashioned annuals in a lawn corner, letting its fragrance and hips mark the seasons – for nostalgic gardeners recreating a childhood-style plot.
- Terrace Statement – Plant in a 50-litre half-barrel with a sturdy trellis, underplanting with trailing herbs to spill over the rim, turning a paved terrace into a vertical rose feature – for busy urban gardeners seeking maximum effect in limited space.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Constance Spry, registered as ‘Constance Spry’, English Rose collection; ARS exhibition name identical. Classified as climbing rose, large-flowered climber and shrub type for garden and show use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by David Charles Henshaw Austin, United Kingdom, from ‘Belle Isis’ × ‘Dainty Maid’; raised circa 1960, introduced and registered in 1961 by David Austin Roses Ltd in the UK. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit (1993) and Royal National Rose Society Award of Garden Merit (1996), plus show recognition as Modern Shrub Rose in the Rose Society of Tucson Show. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Large, vigorous, upright climber reaching about 2.5–4 m high with 1.8–3.2 m spread. Carries dense, matt, light-green foliage and moderate prickles; spent blooms generally benefit from deadheading to maintain neatness. |
| Flower morphology |
Produces large, very double, rosette-shaped blooms with over 40 petals, usually in clusters. Flowers are once-blooming rather than repeat-flowering, providing a concentrated main flush in early summer on established framework. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Mid-pink blooms, ARS code mp, RHS 65D outer and 57C inner. Newly opened flowers show paler outer petals and richer centres, then fade to soft pastel pink, with colour holding better in cooler, less intense sunlight conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very strong, full myrrh fragrance that can be noticed from a distance in still air. Scent quality is one of the defining features of this cultivar, contributing greatly to its popularity for seating areas and cut-flower use. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces abundant ellipsoid hips, around 14–22 mm diameter, coloured orange-red (RHS 40A). Hips are ornamental and edible, extending the season of interest well into autumn and offering additional wildlife value in family gardens. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Shows good resistance to major foliar diseases including powdery mildew, black spot and rust. Winter hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C, corresponding to RHS H7, Swedish Zone 4 and USDA Zone 5b under normal garden conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to pergolas, arbours, walls, fences and feature specimens; spacing 150–275 cm depending on use. Prefers regular watering in dry periods, tolerates partial shade, and generally needs only light pruning and tying-in each year. |
CONSTANCE SPRY offers romantic, highly fragrant summer arches, reliable long-term structure and attractive hips in an easy-care, own-root form that rewards patient gardeners; a thoughtful choice if you favour enduring, traditional beauty.