ROUTE 66™ – purple bedding shrub rose - Carruth
Step off the city pavement into a post-rain path of fragrance, where velvety purple blooms with a creamy eye glow against dark green foliage, and robust health supports relaxed, low-input gardening; ideal for small London front gardens coping gracefully with persistent coastal-style wind and rainfall. This bushy modern shrub settles quickly in heavy or chalky soil, bringing strong colour impact in flowerbeds, hedging or a standout pot of at least 40–50 litres, while its reliable repeat-flowering habit means weeks of evolving blooms from early summer onwards. Own-root stock offers reassuring longevity and the calm knowledge that, as roots establish in year one, shoots build structure in year two and full garden presence unfolds by year three, supporting sustainable, low-fuss gardening in busy urban lives.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden focal shrub |
Forms a bushy, upright mound to 100–140 cm, giving an immediate focal point for terraced-house front gardens without demanding complex pruning. Own-root vigour supports a long-lived framework that matures steadily for beginners |
| Low-maintenance flowerbed block |
Clusters of self-cleaning, repeat flowers mean less deadheading and more colour from a single planting, ideal for relaxed, low-time borders. Regular spacing at 65 cm quickly knits into a dense, weed-softening mass for busy-owners |
| Relaxed flowering hedge |
Planted at 55 cm, the bushy habit and glossy dark foliage build a soft, informal hedge that screens bins or parking without feeling harsh. Reliable structure and simple annual trimming keep boundaries tidy for family-gardens |
| Statement container on a small driveway |
Performs well in a large, 40–50 litre peat-free container, where its strong colour and compact spread create impact beside a front door or parking bay. Straightforward watering and feeding make it manageable for balcony-owners |
| Colour accent in sustainable, rainwater-fed planting |
Tolerates typical UK downpours and breeze, working well with permeable gravel or planting pockets that guide roof run-off, so surfaces can stay green while coping with more frequent heavy rain for city-gardeners |
| Feature shrub among perennials |
The velvety purple and white-eyed flowers combine beautifully with airy perennials, while dense foliage fills structural gaps. Long flowering bridges seasonal lulls between perennials for design-conscious |
| Fragrant seating-area companion |
The powerful clove-like scent carries well in still evening air, enriching a small patio or bench corner. Repeated flushes mean the fragrance returns through summer with little intervention for scent-lovers |
| Long-term own-root investment plant |
Delivered as an own-root rose that rebuilds reliably after pruning or winter damage, supporting decades of use; the plant settles roots first, then structure, before reaching full ornamental effect, which reassures future-focused |
Styling ideas
- Urban-hedge – Plant a loose single-row hedge along a short front boundary, interspersed with evergreen St John’s-wort for year-round green and purple contrast – ideal for privacy-minded homeowners
- Perennial-ribbon – Weave ROUTE 66™ through drifts of Coreopsis and dwarf Michaelmas daisies for a soft, late-summer ribbon of purple, yellow and lilac – perfect for low-input flowerbed enthusiasts
- Driveway-duo – Flank a parking space with two large peat-free containers, underplanting the rose with trailing thyme and nepeta to soften edges – suited to compact, car-owning households
- Evening-nook – Position a single shrub by a small seating area, pairing with lavender and sage so the spicy rose perfume mingles with herbal notes – appealing to after-work relaxers
- Rain-garden – Set in a slightly raised island bed within a gravelled front garden, edged by low grasses to slow and absorb run-off while showcasing the dark blooms – attractive to sustainability-focused gardeners
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Modern shrub rose, bed rose group; registered as WEKmorfis and marketed as Route 66™ Bedding rose WEKmorfis, a purple bedding shrub rose in the shrub rose (modern shrub) exhibition category. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Tom Carruth (United States, 2001) for Weeks Wholesale Rose Grower, Inc.; complex parentage combining Sweet Chariot, Blue Nile, Purple Splendour and further seedlings; introduced commercially by Weeks Roses in 2003. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised at the Santa Fe Rose Society Show in 2002, where it received Best Modern Shrub Exhibit, signalling strong show-bench presence and reliable garden performance among modern shrub roses. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub reaching around 100–140 cm high and 75–110 cm spread, with dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickles; good self-cleaning habit as most spent flowers drop without intervention. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, flat, single to semi-double blooms with 5–12 petals, opening in clustered inflorescences. Remontant habit ensures a strong main flush followed by an abundant second flowering and further intermittent blooms. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep velvety black-purple buds (RHS 187A outer) open to dark-purple flowers with a vivid white eye (inner 155D), then soften to rosy purple and pink-lilac tones as the creamy centre enlarges and golden-yellow stamens show clearly. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Noted for a powerful, spicy fragrance with distinct clove notes, giving a pronounced scent presence around paths and seating; single blooms expose stamens, although overall pollinator appeal is assessed as relatively limited. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is modest due to the more double blooms in later stages; when present, hips are small, spherical and orange-red, around 7–9 mm in diameter, adding a discreet seasonal accent rather than a dominant autumn feature. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7, Swedish zone 3). Disease profile shows resistance to powdery mildew and rust, with medium susceptibility to black spot, supported by good foliage recovery. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions for maximum flowering; suitable for beds, parks, solitary use and urban green spaces. Low-maintenance, needing minimal pruning and moderate watering, with recommended spacing 55–100 cm depending on use. |
ROUTE 66™ offers rich purple colour, self-cleaning repeat flowers and a long-lived own-root framework that matures steadily over the years, making it a thoughtful choice for gardeners seeking easy structure and lasting fragrance.