GOLDEN APATIT – golden-yellow hybrid tea rose – McGredy
With its luminous golden-yellow blooms and medium height, GOLDEN APATIT is a hybrid tea you can trust to perform steadily in an ordinary family garden. The upright, bushy habit creates a neat structure for smaller beds and front gardens, while its medium maintenance needs remain manageable for time-pressed beginners. Flowers appear singly on strong stems, giving reliable cut-flowers for the house as well as a tidy garden display. Disease resistance is balanced and practical, with good tolerance of powdery mildew and black spot that supports long-term health. As an own-root plant it settles in, regenerates well and rewards you over many years, forming its final bush shape where you plant it for lasting stability. In typical British conditions it copes well with damp, breezy spells, anchoring cleanly in the soil even where gardens are exposed to coastal winds and rain. In the first years you will see a natural development from rooting, to stronger shoots, to full ornamental impact, helping you plan a calm, low-effort garden rhythm.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point |
The upright, bushy habit and clear golden-yellow flowers give a defined focal point without overwhelming a small front plot, helping you achieve a classic, tidy look with minimal shaping and only seasonal deadheading – reassuring for the homeowner. |
| Small mixed border |
At around 100–140 cm tall with mid-green, slightly glossy foliage, this variety slots comfortably into mixed borders, providing colour at eye level while leaving room for perennials beneath, keeping the border visually structured yet easy to look after for the busy-gardener. |
| Cutting patch near the house |
Large, high-centred, double flowers on single stems make this rose ideal for cutting, so a short row near the back door can supply scented, golden-yellow blooms for vases without complex cultivation, bringing early satisfaction to the style-conscious. |
| Small group planting (1–3 shrubs) |
Planting in a compact group at 60–90 cm spacing creates a rounded, coherent bush effect that reads as one glowing clump from the path, delivering a strong visual return from few plants – helpful for the budget-aware. |
| Low cottage-style bed by the path |
The warm, butter-yellow tones combine easily with soft blues and purples, echoing traditional cottage gardens without demanding intricate design; regular flowering through the season keeps the path cheerful with modest effort for the romantic-gardener. |
| Feature rose in a 50–60 litre container |
In a large, well-drained container of at least 50–60 litres, its compact footprint and upright growth form a clear structural accent on a terrace or by a doorway, provided watering is regular, suiting the space-limited urban-dweller. |
| Family lawn edge or play-area border |
Medium height and moderately thorny stems make it a practical choice along a lawn edge where children play nearby, offering showy flowers without becoming overly tall or sprawling, provided simple pruning is done yearly by the practical-gardener. |
| Exposed, rain-prone beds |
The sturdy, bushy framework and reliable disease tolerance give a stable presence in sites that face regular wind and showers, reducing the risk of bare, weakened plants in typical British weather for the cautious beginner. |
Styling ideas
- COTTAGE MIX – Combine GOLDEN APATIT with bearded irises and airy perennials to soften its upright shape, creating a relaxed cottage feel that still looks orderly for those who favour charm with low effort – ideal for beginners.
- GOLDEN FOCUS – Use a trio of plants as a glowing focal point in a small front bed, underplanted with low lavender or catmint to frame the blooms and reduce weeding – suited to homeowners wanting a clear, simple statement.
- PATH EDGE – Line a short path with two or three evenly spaced shrubs, filling gaps with compact blues such as English bluebeard for calm contrast and easy maintenance – perfect for busy gardeners who like visual structure.
- PATIO FEATURE – Grow a single plant in a 50–60 litre terracotta pot with fine gravel mulch, pairing with simple evergreen box or hebe nearby for year-round framework – attractive for urban gardeners with limited ground space.
- CUTTING CORNER – Dedicate a sunny corner bed entirely to GOLDEN APATIT, allowing straight rows for easy access and regular cutting, giving continuous indoor arrangements without complex design – ideal for style-led but time-poor owners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose marketed as GOLDEN APATIT – golden-yellow hybrid tea rose – McGredy; part of the Hybrid tea rose collection, commercial type and group both hybrid tea rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Samuel Darragh McGredy IV of McGredy Roses International, New Zealand; parentage unknown, bred around 1998, introduction and registration years not documented. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy shrub typically 100–140 cm tall, with a 65–95 cm spread; moderately dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a well-proportioned garden bush. |
| Flower morphology |
Hybrid tea type with large, 2.75–3.95 inch, double, cup-shaped blooms borne mainly singly; 26–39 petals, flowering in flushes with a good second bloom after the main early-summer display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep golden-yellow with a warm glow; ARS dy, RHS 14C outer and 12B inner; buds open vivid gold then fade to soft butter-yellow without browning, maintaining a uniform, clean appearance as flowers age. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength fragrance combining fresh, fruity and tea-like notes; noticeable at close range and around cut flowers indoors, adding sensory interest without becoming overpowering in smaller gardens. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally limited due to the double blooms; when present, produces small, spherical orange-red hips about 10–14 mm across, contributing occasional late-season detail. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Medium overall disease resistance with good tolerance of powdery mildew and black spot, rust medium; hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C, RHS H7, corresponding to USDA Zone 6b and Swedish Zone 3. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in a sunny position; suitable for beds, specimen use and cutting; plant 50–90 cm apart depending on effect, at 2.8–3.2 plants/m² for massing; medium care needs with occasional plant protection advisable. |
GOLDEN APATIT offers clear golden blooms, a neat upright habit and dependable repeat flowering on a durable own-root base, making it a sound, long-lived choice if you would like a reliable hybrid tea in your garden.