OPEN ARMS – pink climbing-rambling rose – Warner
In a compact family garden or London terrace front, ‘Open Arms’ offers an easy way to green vertical walls with clouds of soft pink blossom and a light, classic scent after summer rain. This miniature-style climber flowers generously in repeating waves, its semi-double blooms leaving stamens open for bees while glossy foliage stays healthy with notably good disease resistance. On its own roots it settles in steadily, building a long-lived framework that regenerates well if pruned back, so you can expect a calm Year 1 establishment, stronger Year 2 growth and full garden presence by Year 3. Ideal where you want a low-fuss, sustainable feature that copes reliably with changeable weather and the demands of a real family garden, even on heavier soils where good drainage helps it handle coastal wind and rainfall. Train it on arches, fences or a porch for a welcoming, open-armed entrance that feels both traditional and quietly contemporary. The relatively modest height for a climber keeps it manageable on smaller plots, yet the long season of bloom and decorative hips give lasting interest for people and pollinators alike. In larger containers of at least 50 litres it performs as a neat vertical accent, especially where you collect rainwater for irrigation and prefer peat-free composts and low-maintenance gardening.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small front gardens and townhouse entrances |
The moderate ultimate height and relatively narrow spread make ‘Open Arms’ ideal for framing a doorway, railings or a short run of fencing without overwhelming a compact plot, giving long-season colour with minimal intervention for busy urban gardeners. |
| Low-maintenance family pergola or rose arch |
Reliable repeat flowering and good self-cleaning mean fewer deadheading rounds, while sound disease resistance reduces the need for sprays, creating a soft pink tunnel that stays attractive through the school-holiday peak for time-poor family owners. |
| Rainwater-conscious container and balcony planting (50 L+) |
In a large, well-drained pot of at least 40–50 litres, this own-root climber forms a durable, regenerating framework that responds well to collected rainwater, helping manage wetter spells and dry gaps in a sustainable way for eco-aware city households. |
| Pollinator-friendly vertical accent on fences |
Open, semi-double blooms with exposed stamens provide easy access for bees and hoverflies over a long season, adding genuine wildlife value while softening hard boundaries for beginners seeking bee-friendly choices. |
| Partially shaded side passages and narrow paths |
Good tolerance of partial shade and a light, classic fragrance make this climber well suited to side returns and through-routes, where you want reliable flowering without full sun, enhancing the walk-through experience for terraced-house residents. |
| Durable long-term feature for family gardens |
Strong own-root character, RHS Award of Garden Merit and solid winter hardiness combine to give a long-lived, structurally stable plant that regrows well after harder pruning, rewarding patient Year 1–3 establishment for long-view home gardeners. |
| Coastal and exposed, wetter UK sites |
Glossy foliage with high disease resistance and a flexible climbing habit help it cope with blustery conditions and frequent showers, staying ornamental where roses can struggle with wind and persistent rain for seaside and wet-climate gardeners. |
| Easy-care specimen on sustainable, peat-free soils |
Low routine maintenance, good health and a forgiving root system suit peat-free mixes and improved clay or chalk, provided drainage is managed, making establishment straightforward for new and low-confidence gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- PorchWelcome – Train ‘Open Arms’ over a slim arch by a terraced-house door, underplant with creeping thyme to soften paving, and enjoy a scented, bee-dotted entrance – ideal for urban front-garden owners.
- SoftScreen – Cover a side fence with this compact climber, threading in low Achillea and nepeta for a pastel, meadow-like base – suited to families wanting privacy without heavy hedging.
- PastelPergola – Let stems weave along a light pergola, pairing with Verbena hastata ‘Blue Spires’ and lavender for airy height and pollinator movement – perfect for relaxed, low-input gardens.
- ContainerColumn – Grow it in a 50–60 litre pot with a slim obelisk, using peat-free compost and rainwater, then edge the base with thyme for year-round texture – good for balcony and courtyard gardeners.
- RomanticPath – Flank a narrow path with paired arches of ‘Open Arms’, interplanted with sage and catmint to create a soft, fragrant tunnel – appealing to beginners seeking an easy wow-effect.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Miniature-style climbing rose; registered as CHEWpixcel, marketed as ‘Open Arms’ climbing rose; ARS exhibition name ‘Open Arms’; group: Miniature, Climber; collection: climbing rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Christopher H. Warner (UK) from ‘Mary Sumner’ × ‘Laura Ashley’; breeding completed 1991, introduced and registered in 1995 by Warner’s Roses as a garden-worthy exhibition climber. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the RHS Award of Garden Merit (2001) for reliable garden performance, plus RNRS Certificate of Merit (1993), reflecting strong ornamental value and dependable behaviour under UK conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact climber reaching about 200–320 cm high and 120–200 cm wide, with moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate thorns; good self-cleaning habit keeps the plant looking tidy. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped clusters of small blooms, typically 6–15 petals; flowers classed as size S, with remontant repeat flushes through the season, though the second wave is slightly lighter. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Delicate pastel pink overall; ARS pink, RHS 55A outer and 55D inner petals; opens mid-pink then softens to creamy, near-whitish tones around stamens, paling more in strong sun, richer in cool weather. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Light, classic rose fragrance, subtle rather than overpowering, noticeable at close quarters along paths or seating areas; open, semi-double form leaves stamens exposed and attractive to pollinating insects. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate numbers of small spherical hips, approximately 8–12 mm across, coloured red (RHS 40A); hips extend the season of interest into autumn and signal late-season food for wildlife visitors. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated RHS H7 and USDA zone 6b, tolerating about −21 to −18 °C; foliage shows good resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; moderate heat and drought tolerance with watering in long dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best on pergolas, arches, fences or as a specimen; spacing 150–240 cm, 0.4–0.5 plants/m² for massing; suitable for partial shade and large containers; low maintenance with basic pruning and feeding only. |
OPEN ARMS – pink climbing-rambling rose – Warner offers easy-care, long-season flowering and pollinator appeal in a stable, own-root form; a refined choice if you would like a lasting vertical feature with modest effort.