The climbing rose 'Lakeland' was bred in 2013 by Harkness and registered under the name 'Harspiral'.
It has clusters of pretty, semi-double, cup-shaped, pink flowers that are produced in spring, again in mid summer and again in autumn.
The flowers are prized for their strong fragrance and the petal colour is contrasted well with a thick mound of bright yellow stamen.
They go well supported against walls, fences, pillars or trained on archways and trellises.
The Climbing Rose Group:
Modern Hybrid Climbing Roses could be considered to be badly named in that they don't actually climb by sending out twining tendrils but rather-more produce long lived branching stems which need support over an arch or a trellis.
There are a huge number of varieties and cultivars in just about every colour under the sun. All however feature full foliage so therefore provide a good backdrop to the generally large and colourful blooms.
Climbing Roses are sometimes referred to as Rambling Roses, but Ramblers have a separate group of their own as they do genuinely ramble, while climbers need human assistance.