She was in the pot and survived the winter while others did not make it.
Maybe one of DA’s best roses.
Zone 9. Blooms in sprays. Lasts about a week on the bush. Like most DA’s, a poor cut flower but better than most DA’s and will last a few days inside.
6 ft. tall in a single season.
Can be trained as a small climber but it forms an upright bush with many basal breaks. Not as floppy as other English roses.
Very disease resistant (no black spot, not powdery mildew in 2 seasons).
Blooms don’t seem to ball when wet. Handles rain well.
I get a lot of scent 7/10. I have read others don’t pick up much scent, but I find it to be a pretty strong fragrance all day.
Flowers age well in color and don’t shatter easily.
Moderate thorns, can be planted where you may bump it.
Tolerates hot, dry heat well.
Mines planted on east facing wall. Full sun. Afternoon shade.
I planted several roses, and this was the first one to bloom. The blooms are stunning. The fragrance is strong as well. Highly recommend.
I have had two of these rose plants for over two years… they grow really fast and have gorgeous leaves but will not bloom. I have had maybe five flowers in two years. They get plenty of sun and look very happy otherwise…. I keeping hoping for blooms but I’m losing hope.
They are planted right next to my Koko Loko roses who are constantly in bloom with the same conditions, so I’m not sure what’s going on.
Thank you so much for sharing this with us—and for giving these roses two years of care! We love that they're putting on such healthy growth and looking happy otherwise; that's actually a great foundation to work from.
Non-blooming roses can happen for a few reasons: sometimes it's nutrition (especially nitrogen-heavy feeding that favors foliage), occasionally pruning timing, or occasionally a variety-specific quirk we can help you troubleshoot. Since your Koko Lokos are thriving nearby, we're confident we can figure this out together.
We'd love to help turn those gorgeous leaves into gorgeous blooms. Please reach out to our experts at **info@heirloomroses.com** with a few photos—close-ups of the canes, foliage, and overall plant shape would be super helpful—and let us know a bit about your care routine (feeding schedule, pruning approach, soil type). Our team will work with you to pinpoint what's going on and get those roses blooming for you.
You've done the hard part; let's get you to the payoff!
Sincerely,
The Heirloom Team


