There’s something about roses in a Southern garden that brings timeless beauty, incredible fragrance and a touch of romance.
On a warm afternoon, it’s easy to understand why generations of gardeners have treasured roses as their scent drifts through the air and blooms glow in the sunlight. Few plants can match the elegance that roses bring to the landscape.
Today, I’m highlighting three exceptional varieties from David Austin Roses that truly shine in Southern gardens. David Austin roses are a type of rose bred to combine the romantic, cupped shapes and intense fragrance of historic roses with the repeat-blooming habits, hardiness and wide color palette of modern roses.
Munstead Wood is a rose that will stop you in your tracks.
The blooms are a deep, velvety crimson -- almost the color of a fine red wine. Each flower is packed with layers of rich petals that create that classic, old-world rose form gardeners love so much. The color alone makes a dramatic statement, especially when planted against green foliage or paired with lighter flowering plants.
But the beauty of Munstead Wood goes beyond appearance.
The fragrance is absolutely incredible. Like many David Austin roses, it carries a rich, fruity scent that can easily perfume an entire section of the garden. In the South where outdoor living spaces are an important part of the landscape, planting a fragrant rose near a patio, walkway or porch allows you to enjoy that perfume throughout the season.
In our warm, humid climate, Munstead Wood performs best with plenty of sunlight and good air circulation.
Giving roses room to breathe helps reduce disease pressure and keeps the foliage healthier through the long growing season. A good layer of mulch around the base helps conserve moisture and regulates soil temperature during the heat of summer.
Another beautiful variety worth growing is Gabriel Oak.
This rose brings a slightly brighter, glowing deep-pink tone to the garden. The flowers are full, rounded and incredibly elegant, almost looking handcrafted when fully open.
One of the things I appreciate most about Gabriel Oak is its repeat-blooming habit. It continues producing flushes of flowers throughout the growing season, giving gardeners months of color and fragrance.
If you’re looking to brighten the garden with cheerful color, The Poet’s Wife is one of the standout yellow roses from David Austin.
The blooms open in a beautifully cupped shape and are a rich, luminous yellow. The flowers have an elegant softness to them that adds warmth wherever they are planted.
Yellow roses can sometimes fade in intense summer heat, but The Poet’s Wife holds its color remarkably well. Its blooms strikingly contrast against dark green foliage, making it a wonderful addition to cottage-style gardens, mixed beds or formal rose plantings.
Like the other David Austin roses, it offers lovely fragrance along with exceptional beauty.
One reason these David Austin roses are so popular is that they combine the romance and fragrance of old garden roses with the repeat-blooming qualities modern gardeners want. In Southern landscapes, they bring season-long color while adding a sense of timeless tradition.
If you’re ready to add color, fragrance and classic beauty to your landscape, these roses are a wonderful place to start. Each offers something special that can transform an ordinary garden into an unforgettable one.
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Contacts
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Extension Specialist I- MSU Extension- Pearl River County