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'Mother & Daughter™' rose Description
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'Mother & Daughter™' rose photo
Photo courtesy of Johno
Availability:
Commercially available
Synonyms:
RANmd
HMF Ratings:
2 favorite votes.  
Origin:
Discovered by Lloyd Rankin (Australia, 2002).
Introduced in Australia by Rankins Nursery in 2011 as 'Mother & Daughter'.
Class:
Hybrid Tea.  
Bloom:
Yellow.  Sulfur-yellow.  Strong, citrus, fruity, tea rose fragrance.  60 to 65 petals.  Average diameter 5".  Very large, very full (41+ petals), borne mostly solitary, quartered bloom form.  Blooms in flushes throughout the season.  
Habit:
Bushy, upright.  Matte, medium green, leathery foliage.  3 to 5 leaflets.  

Height: 4'1" (125cm).  Width: 39" (100cm).
Growing:
Can be used for cut flower.  
Patents:
Australia - Application No: 2012/036  on  16 Feb 2012   VIEW PBR PATENT
 
United States - Patent No: PP 25,244  on  27 Jan 2015   VIEW USPTO PATENT
Application No: 13/815,777  on  14 Mar 2013
Inventors: Rankin; Lloyd (Beaconsfield, AU)
The cultivar `RANMD` was discovered as a naturally occurring branch mutation in 2002 in at a commercial nursery in Beaconfield, Victoria, Australia. This mutation was isolated by vegetative propagation and grown to a mature plant for further observation of its characters over the next 9 years....
The parent variety `Valencia` is characterized by its apricot colored double flowers.
Notes:
Parentage is unclear.
The U.S. Patent says it was "branch mutation" - i.e. sport.
Rankins website (see refs) in 2015 said it was "found as a seedling".