AMOURIN – yellow climbing rose – Vissers
Bring a touch of quiet romance to a small London front garden with AMOURIN, a softly yellow climbing rose bred for balance between beauty and ease. Its semi-double blooms stay a gentle creamy yellow from bud to fall, opening wide enough to be kindly pollinator-friendly while still looking refined on a modest terrace or balcony. On typical UK clay soils it copes well once drainage is improved, handling blustery showers and cool summers with reassuring reliability in exposed, rain‑washed sites. As an own-root climber it is bred for longevity, regrowing strongly if ever cut back and keeping its ornamental value year after year with minimal fuss. Plant it where you can enjoy its pastel flowers against dark green foliage and use stored rainwater so it settles quickly into a sustainable, low‑input rhythm. In a large 40–50 litre pot or against a front-garden trellis, you will see roots establishing in the first year, stronger shoots and more clusters in the second, and full, satisfying flourishing from the third season. Choose AMOURIN if you want a climber that feels quietly dependable rather than demanding.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Main feature for a small terraced-house front garden |
AMOURIN’s compact climbing habit fits neatly beside a doorway or railings, giving vertical impact without overwhelming a narrow path. Own-root stamina means it will mature into a long-lived, low-fuss focal point for busy urban gardeners |
| Rainwater-aware city planting with improved clay soil |
Once planted into well-prepared ground with added grit or compost, AMOURIN settles reliably into rain-affected, windy spots typical of UK streets, letting you combine water‑butt irrigation with resilient structure for sustainability-minded households |
| Family-friendly, low-maintenance climbing rose |
Semi-double flowers clean themselves reasonably well and only need light deadheading, while moderate disease resistance keeps care simple. Own-root growth bounces back if knocked or pruned hard, suiting time-poor parents |
| Pollinator-supporting vertical accent |
The semi-double, cluster-flowering blooms offer accessible pollen in generous flushes, giving bees gentle foraging along a fence or arch without dominating space, ideal where every square metre must work for wildlife-aware beginners |
| Large container (40–50 litre) on balcony or patio |
In a suitably large, peat-free container with steady watering, AMOURIN can be trained up railings or an obelisk, with its own-root system filling the pot gradually for a stable, long-term display prized by space-conscious city gardeners |
| Soft-coloured climbing backdrop for seating areas |
Pastel yellow blooms and dark foliage create a calm, reflective screen behind a bench or small dining set, with a modest scent level that will not overpower, giving gentle structure and privacy valued by relaxation-focused homeowners |
| Long-term planting in mixed flowerbeds |
Train AMOURIN along low supports or obelisks in a border; the own-root base thickens over time, so if top growth suffers from weather or pruning it regenerates, maintaining design balance for future-planning gardeners |
| Informal, wildlife-friendly front garden structure |
Semi-double flowers followed by neat orange-red hips extend visual interest into autumn, supporting seasonal biodiversity and softening hard boundaries, a practical choice for eco-conscious town residents |
Styling ideas
- Pastel Archway – Train AMOURIN over a slim arch with lavender and nepeta below for a soft yellow-and-lilac entrance that flowers over a long season – ideal for romantic front-garden planners
- Urban Screen – Use against trellis with evergreen candytuft at the base to cover bins or meters, giving a tidy, long-lived green screen – perfect for small city plots
- Balcony Column – Grow AMOURIN in a 50-litre pot with a slender obelisk, underplanting with low baby’s breath for airy white foam – suited to balcony and patio gardeners
- Cottage Railings – Weave stems along black railings and edge with blue globe thistle to contrast soft yellow with steel blue – great for informal cottage-inspired streetscapes
- Calm Corner – Place a bench by a fence clothed in AMOURIN and cool-toned sage, creating a restful, low-maintenance nook – appealing to relaxation-seeking homeowners
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Amourin Climbing rose VISauslen is a climber/shrub group rose, commercial type climbing rose, from the Climbing rose collection; registered cultivar name VISauslen, verified authenticity for garden use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Martin Vissers for Viva International BVBA in Belgium before 2012, registered 2012 and introduced 2018, reflecting modern landscape-breeding goals for reliable, versatile climbing performance. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated: multiple international awards including Lyon landscape prizes 2018, Barcelona Best Climber 2020, Bologna Rose of the Year 2020, Hradec Králové Golden Rose 2021, Warsaw Silver Medal 2021, and Benelux Excellence Roses 2024. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright climbing habit, about 110–200 cm high and 90–150 cm wide, moderately thorny with dense, slightly glossy dark green foliage; moderate self-cleaning and some hips remaining on stems into autumn for seasonal interest. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped flowers with 13–25 petals, medium-sized clusters on each stem. Recurrent, remontant flowering offers a good second flush, ensuring reliable colour and structure through the main garden season when well-sited. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft creamy-yellow blooms, ARS yellow, RHS 11C outer and 11D inner; colour fades gently from cream-yellow to pastel, then buttery pale yellow, retaining an even, harmonious appearance from bud through full bloom to petal fall. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak and barely perceptible, so it suits entrances, windows and compact terraces where strong scent might be overwhelming; emphasis is on visual effect, colour stability and long decorative periods rather than perfume. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces spherical orange-red hips, roughly 6–10 mm in diameter, in moderate quantities; these follow the flowering season and add subtle late-season colour, while also offering incidental wildlife interest in less formal planting schemes. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to around –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3, USDA 6b). Disease resistance is moderate to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, benefiting from basic preventative care and good air movement in humid, maritime climates. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions as climber, specimen or in flowerbeds. Plant 140–230 cm apart, about 0.4–0.5 plants/m² for structure. Maintain with moderate pruning, occasional pest and disease checks, and improved drainage on heavy UK clays. |
AMOURIN Climbing rose VISauslen offers gentle pastel colour, pollinator-friendly blooms and long-lived own-root resilience; an excellent option if you would like an easy, enduring climber for your garden.