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Rose Bushes

UK Grown Roses
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Creme de la Creme Climbing Rose Flowers
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Crème de la Crème Rose Bushes
Rosa Creme de la Creme
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from £7.99
Alibaba Climbing Rose Flowers
Alibaba Rose Bushes
Rosa Alibaba
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Potted
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Wedding Day Rambling Rose Flowers
Scented
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Wedding Day Rose Bushes
Rosa Wedding Day
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Potted
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Rhapsody In Blue Rose Flowers in Bloom Rhapsody In Blue Rose Flowers
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Rhapsody In Blue Rose Bushes
Rosa Rhapsody In Blue
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Potted
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Schoolgirl Climbing Rose Flowers
Schoolgirl Rose Bushes
Rosa Schoolgirl
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Little White Pet Shrub Rose Flowers
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Little White Pet Rose Bushes
Rosa Little White Pet
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Lucky Floribunda Rose Flowers
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Penelope Shrub Rose Flowers
Penelope Rose Bushes
Rosa Penelope
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Ingrid Bergman Hybrid Tea Rose Flowers Ingrid Bergman Hybrid Tea Rose Flowers
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Ingrid Bergman Rose Bushes
Rosa Ingrid Bergman
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Lovestruck Rose Flowers Lovestruck Rose Flowers
'Lovestruck' Rose Bushes
Rosa Lovestruck
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Potted
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Isnt she lovely hybrid tea Rose Flowers
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Isnt She Lovely Rose Bushes
Rose - Isnt She Lovely
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Bareroot
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Belle de Jour Rose Flowers
Belle de Jour Rose Bushes
Rosa Belle de Jour
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Loving Memory Rose Flowers Loving Memory Rose Flowers
Disease Resistant
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Loving Memory Rose Bushes
Rosa Loving Memory
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Amber Queen Floribunda Rose Flowers Amber Queen Floribunda Rose Flowers
Amber Queen Rose Bushes
Rosa Amber Queen
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Dancing Queen Climbing Rose Flowers Dancing Queen Potted Rose in flower
Disease Resistant
Dancing Queen Rose Bushes
Rosa Dancing Queen
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Absolutely Fabulous Rose Flowers Absolutely Fabulous Rose Flowers
RHS Recommended Award of Garden Merit logo
Absolutely Fabulous Rose Bushes
Rosa Absolutely Fabulous
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Hope and Dreams Lilac-pink roses in flowerbed
Hope and Dreams Rose Bushes
Rosa Hope and Dreams
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Sally Holmes Rose Flowers Sally Holmes Rose Flowers
Scented
Thornless
Sally Holmes Rose Bushes
Rosa Sally Holmes
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Polar Star Hybrid Tea Rose Flowers Polar Star Hybrid Tea Rose Flowers
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Polar Star Rose Bushes
Rosa Polar Star
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Jacques Cartier Shrub Rose Flowers Jacques Cartier Shrub Rose Flowers
Jacques Cartier Rose Bushes
Rosa Jacques Cartier
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Grandmas Rose Flowers Grandmas Rose Flowers
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Grandma's Rose Bushes
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About Rose Bushes

Order Potted Rose Bushes Now For Spring Delivery

Order Bareroot Roses For 2026 Spring Planting Season

High quality rose bushes are among the most popular British garden plants, often with beautifully scented and always sumptuous looking flowers beginning in late May with some varieties still going strong into the foothills of winter. 

Roses are enormously tough, transplant reliably, tolerant of a range of conditions and soil types and respond well to pruning.

  • Bareroot roses cost and weigh less than pot grown. They usually need less watering in their first year, and will generally outgrow their potted equivalents.
  • Pot grown plants give you a longer planting season, make for prettier gifts (especially our gift wrapped roses!), and will grow happily in their pots if planting is delayed.
  • Some varieties are only delivered in pots, others are delivered bareroot in winter and in pots the rest of the year. 

Almost all our roses are grafted, using the best rootstocks. The young plants are grown in heavy clayey soil with masses of organic matter to give them the perfect conditions to grow into well-shaped plants with strong roots.

  • When your order is ready: your mail order rose bushes are delivered by next working day courier (not the next working day after ordering!)
  • Friendly support: if there is anything wrong with your plants when you inspect them, Contact Us within 5 working days

All bareroot plants are covered by our Refund Guarantee, so you can give them a whirl with complete confidence.

Types of Rose Bush

  • Shrub: The classic, versatile border or hedging rose, includes Old and Modern varieties. Can be big enough to serve as a small climber.
  • Hybrid tea (Modern bush rose): Among the best varieties for cut flowers, with one flower per stem. They tend to flower in three big flushes during summer, and typically tolerate partial shade well. 
  • Floribunda (Modern bush rose): Profuse clusters of flowers on each stem, that repeat bloom almost continuously all summer - this exertion means that they are not shade-tolerant. They are typically short, and good for low ornamental hedging. Modern bush rose.
  • Climbing: Tidier and less vigorous than a rambler, with stiffer new stems. Flowers twice a year. Ideal for covering walls & growing along fences.
  • Rambling: Bushier and more vigorous than a climber, with more flexible new stems. Usually flowers once a year. Ideal for hiding sheds & growing up a tree.
  • Hedging / Wild: Rugged thorny hedge plants, usually in a mixed country hedge, or grown as a wildlife friendly barrier. They have small, simple flowers, and produce the best rose-hips for consumption.
  • Patio: Most types of rose have dwarf varieties, perfect for growing in pots. Some of them are referred to as "ground cover roses" - in our opinion that is a stretching the definition of ground cover a bit too far, but it's close enough. 
  • Special Occasion: Purely based on their name, these are thoughtful gifts for all sorts of occasions, be they joyous or heartbroken. 

range of garden bulbs with a border edging of lavender is a classic combination to add interest around the base of rose bushes and cover up their legs a bit in spring. 

Where Can I Grow Roses?

You can grow roses almost anywhere in the UK.

They are very hardy, and apart from waterlogged sites, there are roses suitable for any soil type, and shade-tolerant roses for North-facing walls.

The ideal growing conditions are in full sun, but most varieties will tolerate light shade as long as they are not crowded by neighbouring shrubs of the same height or taller. 

Still, you will get the best flower displays in a sunny, sheltered location.

Roses love heavy clay soil as it does not waterlog in winter, but any soil with good drainage can be improved by digging in well-rotted organic matter, and then yearly mulching.

Rose Replant Disease

Replant disease affects several plants, especially roses and other plants in the Rosacea family.

It occurs when you remove an old rose, and plant a new rose straight away in the same soil.

There are three main ways to avoid rose replant disease:

  1. The easiest way: plant a different shrub!
  2. The easy way: wait at least a full 12 months before planting a new rose in the site of an old one. Grow some annual bedding plants there instead for the interim - annual Sweet Peas are great because their roots fix nitrogen, but any mix of wild flowers is good. 
  3. The hard way: dig out a block of soil at least 1 metre square on the surface and 40-50cm deep, and replace the soil with fresh stuff. Lining the sides of the hole with thick, plain (not glossy) cardboard may help. 

Whichever method you choose, apply Rootgrow fungi when you replant the new rose, and feed it with rose food during the growing season.

Choosing Roses

When choosing shrub / bush roses for any kind of mass planting, our advice is to use the same variety in groups of three, and to stick to a narrow palette of two or three colours.

Climbing and rambling roses are different: they tend to be planted singly, so choose according to eventual size when growing on a wall, fence or into a tree, in whatever colour you prefer.

Think about colour co-ordination more when you are growing mixed climbing roses on arches or pergolas. 

Thorns are usually bad right next to paths, doors and windows - stumbling into them is no fun.

Which are the best rose varieties?

The most popular award-winning roses of all time for British Gardens are:

Vigour

Vigour comes up a lot when choosing roses, as it describes how tall and wide the variety will grow.

Depending on the garden, a lot of people are looking for either "the most vigorous one", or one that's "not too vigorous".

A vigorous rose can surmount sheds, trees and large walls. The biggest ramblers may be too much for a rciketty old pergola or shed, which could collapse under the weight!

Before you buy a rose, make sure its spread and height at maturity is suitable.

When and How Do I Plant Roses?

What is the best time to plant roses?

Bareroot roses are by far the best value, the easiest to handle & plant because they weigh so little, and offer the most selection. 

  • Bareroot roses are only planted from about November to the end of March, weather depending. The perfect months are November and March, but anytime in winter is fine.

• Plant potted roses at anytime, as long as you can water them during dry summer weather. In the hottest part of mid-summer, it is preferable to delay planting until the weather cools a bit to reduce stress on the plants.

How to Plant Roses

Soil preparation is an important investment: a rose bush should live for at least 30-40 years.

Dig a square planting hole that is comfortably wide enough to spread the roots out, so they do not touch the sides, but not so deep that the graft union is buried*.

Improve the soil that you removed by adding about 25% well-rotted compost/manure before returning it to the hole, unless you are planting in clay, in which case add nothing to the hole. When planting bareroot roses, it often helps to make a small mound at the bottom of the planting hole to "sit" the rose on and to spread its roots out over.

Wet the roots, and then sprinkle them with Rootgrow before backfilling the hole.

Water well immediately, and all through their first spring and summer. 

*How Deep Should I Plant My Rose?

The short answer is that it really doesn't make a huge difference in most cases: you can plant so that the graft union is above soil level, at soil level, or a couple of inches below soil level. 

The advantage of burying the graft union is that the rose will be very stable in the ground and won't suffer from "wind rock", which tends to affect taller shrub roses. 

The advantage of keeping the graft union above ground is that it will always be completely clear which shoot are root suckers that need to be removed.

Even with a deep planted rose, it should still be obvious which is which: a sucker will have bright green bark and leaves, unlike most garden roses which are tinged with at least a little red.

If a sucker gets old enough to flower, they will be in small clusters, with a single row of white petals and yellow anthers.

Aftercare

Thereafter, deadhead, prune according to the type of rose (lots of advice on this), rake up and burn leaves and prunings and mulch in spring with well-rotted compost.

Do roses need a lot of water?

All new plants need to be watered well during their first, and possibly second, year while they establish deep roots.

In hot weather, most established roses like watering to keep on flowering well. With scented varieties, it is better to water thoroughly once every week or two in dry weather; more regular watering tends to impair their aroma. 

Try not to water the whole plant, only the roots, to reduce risk of fungal diseases.

Roses

Don't plant something in the border below your living room window that blocks the view, as you won't be able to see the fruits of his/her/your labour... The list of roses below could have been designed to fit physically, and they all flower their socks off (we have Joie de Vivre at home and they always still have a few flowers on Christmas Day - Ed.).

These characteristics also make them ideal for good-sized containers. Don't use anything smaller than a 10-litre pot; feed them well and keep the compost moist.

Absolutely Fabulous (Gold)

Ballerina (Pink/White)

Joie de Vivre (Soft Pink)

Macmillan Nurse (White)

Moment in Time (Red)

Don't plant them in a row - an irregular zig-zag will look much better. If you want groups, then plant in threes, in a triangle with sides about 60cm (2ft) long).

Rambling roses are the original giants of the family.
Most ramblers flower once per year, explosively, around early June, and a few modern varieties repeat flower.

An established rambler will put out so much blossom that the foliage is almost hidden for about 6 weeks.

They are classics for growing into mature trees and to cover sheds and outhouses.

They are some of the most disease resistant roses, and suitable for an "extremely informal" country-ish style hedge in a large garden.

This page is for rambling roses, climbling roses have their own.
What's the difference between a rambler and a climber?

You can grow climbing roses almost anywhere in the UK.
They are very hardy, and apart from waterlogged sites, there are roses suitable for any soil type, and shade-tolerant roses for North-facing walls.

Roses love clay soil, but any soil with drainage can be improved to suit them.

Still, you will get the best flower displays in a sunny, sheltered location.

Shrub rose is in effect a catch-all group for any rose, old or modern, that is not a modern bush rose, namely Hybrid Tea, Floribunda, or Patio Rose, and not a Rambler or Climber, although several large Shrub rose varieties can be pressed into service as a low climber.

You can grow hybrid tea roses anywhere in the UK where there is a good amount of sunlight, drainage, and shelter from strong winds.

Full sun is the ideal growing condition, but most varieties will tolerate a little shade as long as they are not crowded by neighbouring shrubs.
Still, you will get the best flower displays in a sunny, sheltered location.

Roses love heavy clay soil as it does not waterlog in winter, but any soil with good drainage can be improved by digging in well-rotted organic matter, and then yearly mulching.

You can grow floribunda roses in any sunny, well drained location, and the smaller varieties are great for growing in containers: most patio roses are either floribundas or bred from them.

Because they flower so hard, they are not suitable for shady areas.

You can grow patio roses along the front of your flower border, but they are most commonly grown in pots of soil based compost.

Patio roses generally will tolerate partial shade, but a sunny position is always best.

Remember that roses in pots always need more watering and feeding than those in the ground.

As much as possible, the pot (not the rose itself) should be in the shade to avoid overheating, especially if it is on the small side.

If the pot will be in full all day against a South facing wall, either use the biggest pot you can, or protect it inside a box.

If you use saucers underneath your pots during summer to help with watering, remember to remove them during winter so the pots don't get waterlogged in winter.