KISSES OF FIRE™ – flame-red climbing rose – Warner
Imagine your London front garden after rain: brick, glossed leaves and flame petals catching the light as KISSES OF FIRE™ climbs with quiet ease up railings, arches or a small terrace wall. This compact exhibition miniature climber brings reliable colour without demanding expert skills, well suited to typical British conditions with changeable skies and soils that often hold water yet still need good drainage in heavy clay or chalk. Neat clusters of very double blooms give a refined structure to modest spaces, and its own-root form offers reassuring long-term stability, calmly regrowing from the base if stems are wind-damaged or pruned hard. Over time it settles into your planting rhythm – roots in year one, generous new shoots in year two, and full garden presence by year three – an easy companion for lavender, nepeta or sage in a rainwater-conscious, sustainable front garden where subtle balance and a lightly fruity scent feel at home.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small front-garden arch or porch frame |
Compact height for a climber and dense foliage make it ideal for training over a modest arch or porch frame, giving you vertical interest without overwhelming a narrow London terrace frontage, suitable for the beginner |
| Rainwater-conscious fence or railing planting |
Performs reliably where roofs and paving shed extra moisture, provided the planting hole has improved drainage, so it suits urban front gardens that must cope gracefully with frequent wet spells, ideal for the urbanite |
| Large container on balcony or courtyard (50–60 L) |
Own-root plants adapt well to life in a substantial pot, filling it steadily with a durable root system that supports long-term flowering on balconies or paved courtyards when given regular watering, appreciated by the busy |
| Low-maintenance vertical screen for privacy |
Steady climbing growth, glossy foliage and repeated flushes of small red blooms create a soft screen along boundary trellis with only moderate pruning and occasional plant protection, practical for the time-pressed |
| Long-lived feature by a doorway or path |
As an own-root rose it can regenerate from the base after hard pruning or weather damage, building into a stable, long-lived feature that quietly anchors your entrance planting over many seasons, valued by the homeowner |
| Romantic “girly” front garden with perennials |
The fiery red clusters pair beautifully with pale pinks, whites and airy blues, creating a feminine yet structured scheme when teamed with nepeta, sage or obedient plant in a small, people-facing space, inspiring for the stylist |
| Courtyard wall or compact pergola |
Moderate vigour and manageable spread let it clothe a short run of wall or a compact pergola without constant tying-in, building a balanced green canopy and repeated colour through summer, reassuring for the novice |
| Cut stems for small indoor arrangements |
The miniature, very double blooms hold their shape well in a bud vase or small jug, allowing you to clip a few stems from the garden for the table without stripping the plant, attractive for the host |
Styling ideas
- Terrace-Romance – Train KISSES OF FIRE™ over a slim metal arch with soft pink Physostegia virginiana ‘Rosea’ and pale grasses beneath for a romantic entrance – ideal for design-conscious terrace owners
- Courtyard-Gallery – Fan it along a warm courtyard wall, underplanting with silvery sage and white Lychnis viscaria ‘Alba’ to set off the fire-red blooms – perfect for small urban courtyards
- Balcony-Theatre – Grow one plant in a 50–60 litre pot with trailing nepeta and violas at the base to create a vertical focal point on a balcony – suited to space-limited flat dwellers
- Front-Focus – Use it as a single specimen by a front door, framed with low lavender and neatly clipped evergreen shapes to keep maintenance simple – great for busy professionals
- Rain-Friendly-Railings – Let it weave through front railings above a strip of permeable gravel and drought-tolerant perennials, turning runoff into a lush vertical display – ideal for sustainable-city gardeners
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Miniature climbing rose; registered cultivar CHEWmultiseek, marketed as Kisses of Fire™ Climbing rose CHEWmultiseek; American Rose Society exhibition name Kisses of Fire. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Christopher Hugh Warner in Shropshire, United Kingdom; introduced and distributed by Warner’s Roses Ltd. in 2012 after local selection and evaluation. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Climbing habit, 200–350 cm high with 150–260 cm spread; dense, glossy dark green foliage, moderately thorny stems, suitable for training on arches, fences, pergolas or walls. |
| Flower morphology |
Small, flat, very double blooms with more than 40 petals, produced in clusters; remontant with abundant repeat flowering, giving several decorative flushes in a season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Fire-red blooms (RHS 53A, 46B; ARS RB) with a soft whitish centre; colour fades gently to raspberry red yet holds well overall, from deep crimson buds to mature flowers. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Light, fresh, fruity fragrance with a subtle rose character; best appreciated at close range along paths, doorways and seating areas rather than as a strongly perfumed variety. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is usually sparse due to very double flowers; when present, small spherical orange-red hips around 6–10 mm provide modest late-season decorative interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); moderate resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, benefits from regular watering and care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to pergolas, walls, fences, large containers and courtyards; plant 185–300 cm apart, in at least 40–50 litre pots if container-grown; requires moderate maintenance and watering. |
KISSES OF FIRE™ offers compact vertical colour, steady repeat flowering and long-term own-root resilience, making it a thoughtful choice for relaxed, small-space gardeners.