Complete climbing rose care: variety selection, training on arches and fences, winter pruning, shaping techniques, and pest and disease management.
Climbing roses are the stars of the garden, adding vibrant color to walls, arches, and fences. The way they spread out long canes and produce flowers in three dimensions has an overwhelming presence that cannot be achieved with other plants. However, to train climbing roses beautifully requires skill in guiding the canes (tying) and pruning. Here we explain practical management points.
Choosing Climbing Rose Varieties
Climbing roses come in varieties with different flowering patterns such as once-blooming, remontant (repeat-blooming), and continuous blooming, so choosing varieties suited to your purpose is important.
- Pierre de Ronsard: Pale pink cup-shaped flowers. Hardy and easy to grow even for beginners. Once-blooming but with exceptional flower production
- Angela: Deep pink semi-double flowers. Disease-resistant and prolific, ideal for fences and arches
- Shinsetsu: Pure white large flowers. Continuous blooming and stunning against white wall training
- Cocktail: Single red flowers with yellow centers. Hardy with soft, flexible canes that are easy to guide
- Climbing Iceberg: Classic white cluster-flowered rose. Blooms well even in partial shade
It's also important to check the growth habits of the canes to match the available space. Large varieties are suited to wall training, while compact varieties are better for arches and obelisks.
Methods for Guiding Climbing Roses on Arches and Fences
Guiding the canes is the most important task that determines the flowering of climbing roses.
- The best time for tying is December to January, when leaves have fallen and canes are flexible
- The basic principle is to train the canes as horizontally as possible. Horizontal positioning makes flower-bearing shoots more likely to emerge from each node
- For arches, wrap canes in a spiral from both sides. Wrapping from opposite directions creates good balance
- For fences, spread the canes in a fan shape and secure them with twine or garden clips
- Canes can break if bent forcefully, so guide them gradually with small angle adjustments
- Old canes (3+ years) produce fewer flowers, so replace them with new ones
Heavy leather rose gloves are essential for this work. Take care not to injure your hands on the thorns.
Winter Pruning and Training
Pruning climbing roses differs in approach from shrub roses.
- Don't cut back the main structural canes; instead, utilize their length for training
- Flowers bloom on short side shoots that emerge from the main canes. Cut back these side shoots to 2-3 buds
- Remove dead wood, thin canes, and crossing canes to improve air circulation
- For once-blooming varieties, cut old canes after flowering to encourage new growth
- For continuous-blooming varieties, deadhead regularly to promote successive flowering
- Train the overall shape to match the wall or arch structure while maintaining balance
While pruning involves the same tasks each year, over time the plant structure becomes fuller and more spectacular flowering walls are achieved.
Disease and Pest Management, and Fertilizing
Because climbing roses have densely packed canes, disease and pest management is particularly important.
- Blackspot disease is prone to occur during the rainy season. Prevention involves spraying lime sulfur during winter
- Powdery mildew tends to appear in spring and fall. Ensure good air circulation and apply fungicide at the first sign
- Aphids concentrate on new growth. Remove by hand when found or treat with insecticide
- Japanese rose sawfly larvae feed on leaves. Identify and remove branches with eggs early
- Basic fertilizing consists of winter fertilizer in February, spring fertilizer after flowering, and autumn fertilizer in September. Apply organic fertilizer in balanced proportions
- Mulching around the base prevents soil drying and helps prevent blackspot disease
Choosing disease-resistant varieties is the most effective way to reduce the need for chemical sprays.
Find Climbing Roses on br-choku
On br-choku, you can purchase climbing rose seedlings directly from specialist rose producers. The major advantage is being able to consult directly with breeders about variety recommendations suited to your location, guidance on training techniques, and management methods adapted to your regional climate. Find the climbing roses that will add vibrant color to your garden on br-choku.