America is for gardeners planning height, structure, and a strong vertical rose moment. Its salmon with a brownish cast flowers, strong fragrance, and mature spread matter as much as the support you choose for it.
Cultivar overview
America is a climbing rose from Bill Warrine. Introduced in 1976, it is best understood through its salmon with a brownish cast colour, strong scent profile, and repeat bloom habit. Its strong fragrance is one of the main reasons to consider it for a spot close to people. Repeat flowering makes it easier to plan for more than one moment of interest during the season.
Garden character and use
Use it where a vertical rose can earn its space: along a fence, over an arch, against a pillar, or on a sturdy trellis with room for training. At about 12 ft by 7 ft, it needs a position where mature growth will not feel crowded. Its salmon with a brownish cast colour gives it a colour profile that is easiest to judge beside neighbouring rose varieties and companion planting.
Bloom, fragrance, and care notes
America is strongest for gardeners who care about both scent and repeat bloom. With petal count noted as 30-35, the bloom has a useful clue to fullness and shape. Give it good airflow, steady watering, and a sunny position so the fragrance and flower form have the best chance to show well.