Pink Roadrunner – pink park rose - Uhl
With its fast-spreading habit and rich mid-pink blooms, Pink Roadrunner creates a softly romantic, storybook feel in everyday family gardens. This compact shrub rose is ideal for relaxed, “girly” cottage borders, edging paths or softening a kitchen-garden fence, while coping reliably with exposed sites where frequent rain and wind demand sturdy growth and good anchoring in the soil. Its bushy, slightly spreading shape quickly knits together into a low, flowering carpet, bringing colour and romance to small plots without asking for complex pruning or expert care. As an own-root plant, it is naturally long-lived, regenerates well after any winter damage, and keeps its ornamental value stable over the years, making it a dependable choice for busy gardeners. Over time, the dense, dark green foliage sets off the pink clusters beautifully, while the semi-double flowers with visible yellow stamens offer a welcome stop for bees and other visitors. Enjoy dependable flowering throughout the season and a strong, far-reaching scent that adds a gentle, afternoon-tea atmosphere beneath arbours, pergolas or simply by your favourite seating corner.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Groundcover in a cottage-style front garden |
Its bushy, slightly spreading habit makes Pink Roadrunner an effective low groundcover, quickly filling gaps around paths or under taller shrubs with continuous colour. The dense, dark green canopy helps shade soil, reducing weed pressure and giving small family gardens a tidy, well-kept look with minimal intervention, ideal for those wanting soft structure without formal clipping, especially busy homeowners |
| Low hedge along paths and driveways |
Planted at 40 cm spacing, this rose forms a low, informal hedge with consistent mid-pink clusters, perfect for softening straight lines without appearing rigid. Own-root plants establish securely and reshoot well if ever pruned hard, providing a long-lived boundary that copes with everyday knocks, children, pets and light shading from parked cars, suiting family gardeners |
| Mixed cottage border with perennials |
The season-long flowering and mid-pink tone blend naturally with lavenders, campanulas and kitchen-garden herbs, helping you achieve an English-countryside feel in average-sized plots. Semi-double flowers invite pollinators, while healthy, dark foliage forms a calm backdrop for lighter perennials, giving reliable structure that complements changing seasonal planting and appeals to romantic traditionalists |
| Feature shrub in a small family garden bed |
At around 60–90 cm high, Pink Roadrunner is large enough to stand out yet compact enough for modest beds. In an own-root, 2-litre form, it settles quickly and matures into a balanced shrub that keeps its shape without elaborate pruning. In typical gardens, this means dependable impact from a single plant used as a focal point, reassuring beginner gardeners |
| Large container or half-barrel near seating |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container, its rounded habit and plentiful clusters give a generous, rose-filled look on patios or balconies. The strong, far-reaching scent enhances evening relaxation and afternoon tea moments, while own-root resilience supports recovery if pots dry briefly, giving an indulgent yet straightforward choice for urban balcony-owners |
| Low-maintenance family border in challenging weather |
This variety combines good heat and drought tolerance with moderate disease resistance, so it copes well with typical UK fluctuations without constant spraying. Its dense, well-rooted framework helps stabilise the soil and stand firm where blustery rain and coastal winds might damage lighter plants, giving peace of mind to time-poor gardeners |
| Rose planting with long seasonal interest |
Remontant flowering means generous first blooms followed by a particularly plentiful second flush, keeping borders colourful past the classic June peak. As the petals fade to paler pink with a silvery sheen and bright red hips develop later, the plant offers quietly evolving interest through summer into autumn, appreciated by long-term planners |
| Pollinator-friendly corner by a kitchen garden |
Semi-double, cup-shaped blooms with exposed yellow stamens provide easy access to pollen, encouraging bees and other beneficial insects around vegetables and fruit. The compact height keeps the flowers at a practical level for observation, while the fragrance and relaxed shape fit naturally beside herb beds and soft fruit clumps, delighting wildlife lovers |
Styling ideas
- Soft-edge border – Line a front path with Pink Roadrunner and low catmint for a hazy pink-and-blue ribbon that stays tidy without clipping – ideal for relaxed, cottage-style homeowners
- Tea-corner pot – Plant it alone in a 50 litre half-barrel beside a bistro set, underplanting with trailing campanula to spill over the rim – perfect for balcony or patio rose enthusiasts
- Kitchen-garden frame – Use short rows of Pink Roadrunner to edge vegetable beds, combining flowers, hips and pollinator support – appealing to kitchen gardeners who like traditional charm
- Layered shrub mix – Place it in front of taller roses or flowering shrubs, with hostas at the base for foliage contrast and easy groundcover – suited to family gardeners seeking structure without formality
- Storybook slope – On a gentle bank, mass-plant for a pink, flowering carpet that also helps hold soil, interspersed with hardy grasses – attractive for those taming tricky spots in informal gardens
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Pink Roadrunner (Roadrunner Collection), shrub / park rose; registered as UHLarium, also traded as Roadrunner and UHLarium; ARS exhibition name Pink Roadrunner. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Jürgen Walter Uhl for W. Kordes’ Söhne, Germany; parentage unknown. Introduced and registered in 2001, representing the pink member of the Roadrunner groundcover range. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds ADR certification from 2003, indicating proven performance in independent German trials for garden-worthiness, health and overall reliability under non-sprayed conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, slightly spreading shrub to around 60–90 cm tall and 60–100 cm wide, with dense, dark green, slightly glossy foliage and notable prickliness, forming an effective flowering groundcover. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped, cluster-flowered blooms of medium size (about 4–7 cm), carrying 13–25 petals. Freely remontant with a plentiful second flush, maintaining display through the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Clear mid-pink with subtle purplish tones (RHS 67B–67C), buds deeper and silky. Colour fades moderately to paler pink with a slight silvery edge before petal fall, giving a gentle, romantic effect. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Described as a strong, far-reaching scent, adding sensory presence around seating areas. Exact fragrance character is not documented but is notable enough to be experienced at short distance. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate quantities of bright red (RHS 42A) spherical hips, about 15–22 mm across, providing late-season colour and additional wildlife interest once flowering has eased. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −37 to −34 °C (USDA 3b, RHS H7, Swedish zone 6). Good heat and drought tolerance; black spot resistant with moderate susceptibility to mildew and rust under pressure. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Recommended for groundcover, slopes, flower beds, parks and large pots. Plant 50 cm apart in masses, 40 cm for hedging or 80 cm as a specimen; 4–5 plants/m² depending on arrangement and effect. |
Pink Roadrunner offers compact, flowering groundcover with strong fragrance and good heat tolerance, and in own-root form it promises dependable, long-lived performance in everyday family gardens you may comfortably choose.