MACWAIRAR – yellow hybrid tea rose – McGredy
This upright hybrid tea brings a touch of elegance to small and medium gardens with its pure lemon-yellow buds and classic high‑centred form. The colour holds remarkably reliably, fading gently through shades of soft pastel yellow without bleaching, even in strong sun. Well suited to sheltered beds in typical British gardens, it performs best where soil is prepared to manage heavier conditions and improve drainage, helping roots establish and anchor securely over time. Planted as a half‑ to one‑year‑old own‑root rose in a 2‑litre pot, it offers a secure start for those who like to cut blooms for the house, while still enjoying a refined garden presence. Its good natural self‑cleaning means many spent flowers drop away by themselves, keeping the bush looking tidy between visits, and the remontant habit ensures repeat flushes through the season when well watered and fed. With light but distinct, mildly spicy fragrance on summer days and a structure that matures steadily, you can expect roots to settle in the first year, strong shoots and shaping in the second, and full ornamental impact by the third.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Feature rose in a front garden bed |
Use as a focal point near an entrance or front path where its tall, upright hybrid tea form and exhibition-style buds provide a clear visual highlight, adding formality to cottage or mixed plantings for the aesthetics-focused beginner |
| Cutting patch in a family garden |
Plant in a sunny, accessible strip or dedicated cutting corner so the long, straight stems and classic high-centred blooms can be harvested for vases, bringing structured, lemon-yellow flowers indoors for the home flower arranger |
| Recurrent colour in a small border |
Use as a repeating accent at 65 cm spacing in a border, letting its remontant flowering habit give multiple waves of yellow through the season with consistent form and colour for the season-long colour lover |
| Low-effort tidy planting near seating |
Position close to a terrace or bench where its good self-cleaning reduces the need to deadhead immediately, helping to keep the area looking ordered between routine maintenance visits for the busy garden owner |
| Warm-toned cottage mix with perennials |
Combine with wallflowers, soft grasses or complementary clematis so the reliable lemon-yellow, non-bleaching blooms add a steady, luminous accent among looser cottage textures for the classic border enthusiast |
| Own-root long-term rose area |
In a permanent rose bed, its own-root habit allows the plant to form its natural bush shape over time and regenerate from the base if cut back hard, supporting long-lived structure for the long-term planner |
| Raised or improved bed on heavy soil |
Best placed where soil has been loosened and enriched, or in a modest raised bed, so the roots establish well, cope better with wet spells and enjoy more reliable drainage and anchoring for the clay-soil gardener |
| Large decorative container by the house |
Grow in a substantial container of at least 40–50 litres in a sunny, sheltered spot, where the upright habit and repeat flowers give height and colour close to doors or patios with straightforward seasonal care for the compact-space gardener |
Styling ideas
- COTTAGE COLUMN – Plant as a single tall accent among wallflowers and airy grasses to bring structured yellow blooms into a relaxed cottage mix – ideal for romantically inclined front-garden owners
- YELLOW RIBBON – Repeat several plants along a path at recommended spacing to create a luminous lemon-yellow edging that guides the eye – suitable for homeowners seeking tidy formality
- PATIO FOCUS – Use one plant in a 50-litre container beside a favourite chair, underplanted with low herbs, so flowers and fragrance are enjoyed at close range – perfect for compact urban terraces
- CUTTING CORNER – Group three plants in a sunny back-of-border pocket to supply regular, long-stemmed blooms for cutting without disturbing main display beds – useful for enthusiastic home florists
- GOLDEN PAIRING – Team with light-flowering clematis to weave through the framework, softening the upright structure while keeping the clear yellow colour as the main note – appealing to creative plant combiners
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid Tea group; registered as MACwairar, traded as Macwairar – yellow hybrid tea rose – MACwairar; exhibition name ‘Aperitif’, after the appetite-stimulating French pre-meal drink. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Samuel Darragh McGredy IV in New Zealand in 1988 from ‘Solitaire’ × ‘Sunbright’; introduced by McGredy Roses International and Jackson & Perkins from 1998 onwards. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Medium-tall, upright bush reaching around 130–170 cm high and 75–105 cm wide, with moderately dense, matt light-green foliage and moderate prickliness, suited to bed or specimen use. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, high-centred hybrid tea blooms, typically 13–25 petals, large-flowered on solitary stems; remontant through the season with a plentiful second flush when well maintained. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure lemon yellow with very good colour retention; ARS code MY, RHS 11B outer and 12A inner; opens rich yellow, fading gradually to soft pastel and creamy tones without strong bleaching. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, restrained scent with a gently spicy rose character; fragrance is noticeable at close range in warm, still weather but not overpowering, suiting those preferring subtle perfume. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small, spherical hips form after flowering, around 8–12 mm across, ripening to red; generally incidental to display but may add a discreet seasonal detail in autumn. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4); needs good cultivation and protection as it is only medium against powdery mildew and black spot, and very rust sensitive. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; water reliably in dry spells, prune as a hybrid tea and monitor for fungal diseases, especially rust, to support strong flowering and foliage. |
MACWAIRAR offers classic lemon-yellow blooms on strong cutting stems, reliable repeat flowering and a regenerating own-root habit, making it a thoughtful choice for gardeners ready to invest a little care for lasting rewards.