Spirit of Freedom – pink English shrub / short climber rose (AUSbite)
Step through your front gate and be greeted by pastel petals and a strong, classic rose perfume that lingers in the air after rain, even when your garden faces wind and wet spells on heavier soils or chalk. ‘Spirit of Freedom’ is a David Austin English Rose that combines romantic clusters of fully double blooms with a bushy, upright habit that can also be trained as a short climber on a wall, arch, or porch pillar in a compact, London-style front garden. Its dense, dark green foliage and generous repeat flowering create a long season of colour with modest maintenance, especially once it has settled. As an own-root rose, it offers reassuring longevity and steady regrowth, maturing from root-building in the first year through stronger shoots in the second to full ornamental presence by the third, giving your planting calm, sustainable structure and enduring balance in a small family garden.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| London terraced-house front garden |
The compact, bushy habit and mid-height growth make it ideal for tight, street-facing beds where you want privacy without overwhelming the space. Good repeat flowering extends interest across the whole season for busy urban gardeners. |
| Short climber on wall, fence or porch |
Train its flexible canes on a low trellis, fence or porch pillars to blur hard boundaries and soften brickwork. Moderate maintenance is rewarded with abundant, cup-shaped clusters that frame doors and windows for design-conscious homeowners. |
| Mixed border with perennials and herbs |
Its pastel pink, very double blooms sit beautifully with lavender, sage or nepeta, lending classic cottage-garden charm. Dense foliage gives a solid backdrop and supports layered planting schemes for informal family gardeners. |
| Rainwater-conscious front garden scheme |
Plant slightly raised above heavy clay or connect to a raingarden strip so excess water drains away from the crown, helping it cope with blustery showers and cool, damp spells for sustainability-minded city gardeners. |
| Feature rose in a small family lawn border |
Use a single shrub as a focal point near a seating area, where the strong, long-lasting fragrance can be fully appreciated. The dense, leafy framework looks good even between flushes for relaxed weekend gardeners. |
| Large container on balcony or paved courtyard |
Grown in a 40–50 litre container of quality peat-free compost, it provides height and romance where borders are impossible. Regular watering and light deadheading keep the blooms coming for space-limited outdoor residents. |
| Soft screening along boundaries |
Planted at hedge spacing, its branching habit and thorny stems create a gentle visual screen that still feels airy. The pastel colour palette avoids a heavy look in narrow plots for neighbour-conscious homeowners. |
| Long-term, low-renewal planting plans |
Own-root growth gives stable performance over many years, with the plant regenerating from its base if pruned harder or after weather damage, reducing the need for frequent replacement for future-focused planners. |
Styling ideas
- Romantic arch – Train ‘Spirit of Freedom’ over a small arch with nepeta at the base to create a scented walkway that softens hard urban lines – ideal for terrace-house front paths.
- Pastel trio – Combine this rose with pale lavender and white foxgloves for a soft, feminine palette that feels fresh rather than fussy – suited to “girly” but grown-up front gardens.
- Cottage corner – Underplant with dianthus and low herbs to echo traditional cottage borders while staying compact and manageable – perfect for beginners wanting charm without complexity.
- Courtyard pillar – Spiral branches up a slim obelisk in a 50-litre pot, paired with slate mulch, for a vertical accent that works in paved courtyards – good for renters and balcony owners.
- Soft screen – Plant in a loose row with ornamental grasses for a gentle, fluttering screen that hides bins or parking areas – useful for practical front gardens that must stay attractive.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Registered as AUSbite, marketed as Spirit of Freedom within the English Rose Collection; shrub / short climber type from David Austin’s range for garden use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by David C. H. Austin in the United Kingdom in 1998 from an unknown seedling × ‘Auscot’; registered 2004 and introduced after 2004 by David Austin Roses Ltd. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub with flexible canes, around 120–180 cm high and 100–160 cm wide, densely thorned, with dark green, slightly glossy foliage providing good coverage. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, very double, cup-shaped blooms with over 40 petals; produced mainly in clusters with good repeat, giving an abundant second flush in favourable seasons. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pale, powder-pink flowers (RHS 65C outer, 70D inner) that slowly fade through silvery-lilac pink towards beige-edged pastels, maintaining a soft, romantic look from bud to fall. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Rich, classic rose fragrance of strong intensity, lingering well on the bush and noticeable on still, humid evenings when planted near paths, doors or seating areas. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set generally sparse due to very double blooms; where formed, hips are bottle-shaped, orange-red (RHS 40A), around 12–18 mm in diameter and mainly ornamental in effect. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4); moderate resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, needing occasional monitoring and care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun, with spacing from 140–230 cm depending on use; prefers well-drained, fertile soil and regular watering in dry spells, plus periodic deadheading and pruning. |
Spirit of Freedom (AUSbite) offers romantic repeat flowering, strong fragrance and long-lived own-root reliability, making it a thoughtful choice if you would like a graceful, enduring English Rose for your garden.