Breeding an English Rose

Breeding a new rose is a unique mix of art and science requiring patience and dedication. From pollination to sale the whole process of creating a new English Rose takes 13 years. With over 60 years of expertise our breeding programme is one of the largest in the world.


1. Selecting Parents

Each new rose begins as a cross between two existing roses, which we call the 'parents'. The key to successful rose breeding is having a deep understanding and intuition for which two roses might work well together. We are continually looking to identify plants which will pass down the characteristics that we desire.

"It's a mixture of science, skill and luck and, while you must look after the general health and vigour of the plant, it is always vital to concentrate on the essential beauty of the flower you are breeding, and try to enhance this."

David Austin Snr.

2. Hybridisation

Having selected suitable parents we collect the pollen from one parent and place it onto the stigma of the other, this process is called cross-pollination and would naturally be carried out by bees. Each year we do 40,000 individual cross-pollinations, all by hand, using a small knife to remove the pollen from the first parents and a paintbrush to apply it to the other parent.

The cross-pollination will eventually form a rose hip, containing around 10 child seeds - a mix of both parents. Like human children, each of those child seeds will be a completely unique mix of the parents' characteristics.

Hybridisation Step 1 - Removing petals off a rose
Hybridisation Step 2 - Removing pollen from a rose a rose by hand
Hybridisation Step 3 – Cross-pollinating a rose by hand using a paint brush
Hybridisation Step 4 – Pots of collected rose pollen

3. Seed Sowing

By November the hips will have ripened sufficiently for us to extract the child seeds. We cut the hips, remove the seeds and store them in refrigerators over winter. In January we will sow around 350,000 individual seeds on benches in our greenhouses. From then until spring these seeds will germinate into small plants with a smattering of blooms.

Long beds of rose breeding seedlings in a large greenhouse
Long beds of rose breeding seedlings in a large greenhouse

4. Initial Selection

The selection process begins in spring when every germinated seedling is assessed by our team of rosarians. Any seedling that shows promise will progress to our outdoor field trials for further assessment. Typically, 150,000 unique seedlings are selected.

"There is nothing more exciting than having 350,000 seedlings growing that no one has ever seen before."

David Austin Snr.

5. Field Trials

At this stage we are assessing full-sized rose bushes in true garden conditions. During the next five years, we carefully asses the plants for all the characteristics we aim to produce. Each year we select the best and propagate them in larger numbers until only 10 of the original seedlings remain.

6. Final Selection

By now we have 7,500 plants of each of the final 10 seedlings to assess. At this vitally important stage, we are looking for the three or four roses which we believe are truly worthy of being introduced to the market.

"The goal remains the same - to try to develop the healthiest roses possible without compromising their beauty, fragrance, grace and most importantly, their charm."

David Austin Snr.


A Lifetime of Dedication

English Roses bred by David Austin

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