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The Rose Times Floribundas
INSIDE THIS ISSUE: Virtually speaking 1 The Chairman’s Notes 3 The Belfast Rose Trials 6 Gareth’s Fabulous 8 The Rose Times Floribundas Derek Visits Kiftsgate 10 VOLUME 4, ISSUE 1 AUTUMN 2020 The ARBA Influence 14 Dave Bryant sows the 17 My apologies for the lateness of this newsletter, ’I m going to blame it seeds on the pandemic! It honestly seems to me that the more we’re not Rose Festival 21 18 allowed to do and the more time we have locked in our homes, the Steve James tries 19 something different less I seem to get done! Jeff Wyckoff- The 21 However, in a summer where the society activities have been limited Great Garden Restoration to our website, Facebook Group and Twitter, there is very little The times they are 24 happening. a’changing for Mike We are currently having the website rebranded and upgraded. It will Roses on Trial at 27 Rochfords be easier to use and have better accessibility to the shop and Goodbye Don Charlton 30 Member’s Area. There will eventually be pages for our amateur rose Rose Royalty breeders to report on their new roses and give advice that will Dr John Howden on 34 Viruses of Roses hopefully encourage many of our members to have a go at breeding Pauline’s Show Patter 39 their own roses. Getting In Touch 43 The shop area is very important to the society. It provides a revenue Seasons Greetings 44 stream, even when there is nothing happening in terms of shows and events. -
Autumn 2020 Issue 23
THE ıntage rose Autumn V2020, Issue 23 NOTE: please change your pdf view to landscape mode for optimum screen viewing. NEWSLETTER FOR THE FRIENDS OF VINTAGE ROSES Autumn 2020, Issue 23 IN THIS ISSUE: Featured Rose: ‘Baltimore Curator’s Report Four Uncommon Noisettes Fostering The Friends of It’s a New Day on Our Belle’ Vintage Roses Modern Shrub Website On windowsills the vases Many rose lovers who Collection It’s a lovely rose, as most count the days—blue are fond of climbing and I am so happy to tell you are that survive the whims, cobalt glass, powder blue clustering flowers are fond When I agreed to foster about the new look and ravages, and vicissitudes of pottery, clear cylinders of Noisettes and Tea- The Friends of Vintage changes to our website time. But it’s also a head- in steel. They are always Noisettes. The Noisette, Roses Modern Shrub Col- www.thefriendsofvintage turner of robust health, ready, smiling at me, an original American rose lection, several years ago, roses.org. Thanks to the and, despite being 177 asking me to bring a rose (c. 1810), boasts virtual I thought it would be no hard work . see page 14 years old . see page 3 blossom. see page 5 bouquets . see page 7 big deal . see page 12 On the cover: ‘Earl of Eldon’ (photo by Gregg Lowery) • • • 2 • • • TABLE OF CONTENTS Featured Rose: ‘Baltimore Belle’. 3 Curator’s Report . 5 Four Uncommon Noisettes . 8 Fostering the Friends of Vintage Roses Modern Shrub Collection. 13 It’s a New Day on Our Website . -
Stars for Your Garden from Down Under
JANUARY / FEBRUARY 2003 Serving You Since 1955 981 Alden Lane, Livermore, CA www.aldenlane.com (925) 447-0280 Announcements Watch the Valley Gardener for great gardening tips with host Jacquie Williams-Courtright. Tune in 4 days a week on Cable Channel 30. Monday: 9 am & 3:30 pm, Friday: Stars For 3 p.m. and Saturday-Sunday: 7 am, 11 am & 2:30 pm. Your Garden Livermore-Amador Valley Garden From Down Under Club meets the first Tuesday of the month, join us on January 7th at 7 p.m. at Alisal School, 1454 Santa Rita By Lydia Roberts Rd, Pleasanton, Ca. For more No, Im sorry we havent got Nicole Kidman or Russell Crowe waiting to go information call Bev at 485-7812. This months speaker will be: Simone home with you, but we have got some beautiful floral stars that are center stage Martell, author of Expectant this month in the garden while our Californian talent is still preparing for their Gardener will talk about what we performance later in the season. can look forward to in our gardeners. The climate in much of Australia and New Zealand is Mediterranean, similar to On February 4th hear Judy Sandkuhle, Central California. It can be a Little cooler here in the winter but most of the plants owner of Sunset Color, talk about her suggested below are hardy to 20 degrees F. They are evergreen and flower from favorite plants and flowers. winter through spring bringing a welcome touch of color. Generally they are easy to care for. They need little to no fertilizer, especially do not use a high phosphorus fertilizer as this can kill them. -
Rose Ramblings
Rose Ramblings VOL. XCIII NO. 4 JOURNAL OF THE SAN DIEGO ROSE SOCIETY APRIL 2021 Patron Member of the American Rose Society ‘Tis the Season for Open Gardens! What’s Inside? By Elaine Ornelas, [email protected] Open Gardens..........…......…1 It’s Spring! And it’s once again time to open our gardens so that folks can enjoy all of the Pilgrimage…………………...5 beauty! Now that COVID has released its ‘grip’ on us somewhat, and vaccines are being administered, President’s Message………..6 we can gratefully venture out a bit still being care- ful not to fall back into another surge of this virus. Monthly Program…………...7 So several of us are opening our gardens using safe We Want a Rose Show……...8 practices such as masks and social distancing as much as possible. We hope you come and enjoy the April Rose Care……………..9 freedom of walking through some amazing gar- dens! Listed here are the open gardens in chrono- Anthracnose…...……………10 logical order. What & When to Spray……11 Magnuson Open Garden Saturday, April 17, 2021 11 a.m.—4 p.m. Cane Dieback………………11 3739 Ticonderoga St., San Diego, CA 92117 (Clairemont area) 858-273-7850 Ten Important Truths……...12 Notes for Novices……….....14 Situated on a canyon with a view to the Pacific Ocean that overlooks Mis- sion Bay the garden contains over 100 roses including climbers, shrubs, English Style Climbers……16 hybrid teas, floribundas, and mini roses, many which are located on a ter- raced hillside. The garden’s perimeter is surrounded by eight fruit trees in- How to Become a CR..….…22 cluding apricot, plum, citrus, fig, avocado, and apple. -
Buckeye Rose Bulletin Winter.Pub
1 The Buckeye Rose Bulletin A Publication of The Buckeye District of The American Rose Society Winter 2018 In This Issue: 2 Director’s Message Now you can keep up to date 5 Buckeye District Spring Meeting with rose shows, societies and 8 Cincinnati Rose Society (CRS) In Time Gone By other activities in the Buckeye 9 Consulting Rosarian Update District through the Buckeye 10 CRS Annual Report Form District web site at 13 Taking Care of Your Pruners and Gen- eral Pruning Steps http://buckeyerose.org/ Plus you 14 A Toast to pH can download current and 17 Other Articles to Tickle Your Brain previous editions of The 18 Summertime Beauties for the Winter Buckeye Rose Bulletin. Months 19 Buckeye Judges Corner Webmaster Steve Campbell 24 Buckeye District Judges’ Roster 28 Call for Nominations for Miniature and Miniflora Rose Hall of Fame 29 Roses in Review 2017 36 American Rose Society 38 Local Club Officers for 2017 40 Upcoming Rose Shows & Events 41 Buckeye District Officers & Chairs The Buckeye District of the American Rose Society 2 DISTRICT DIRECTOR’S MESSAGE By Steve Campbell Continued on next page The Buckeye District of the American Rose Society 3 Continued on next page The Buckeye District of the American Rose Society 4 Seashell, HT 1976 Photo by Mark Miller Steve Campbell [email protected] 5 is on it’s way Mark your calendar for Saturday April, 14, 2018 to attend the Buckeye District Spring Meeting. Location: Willow Brook Christian Village in Delaware, Ohio. 1) Catch up with fellow Rosarians from across the District 2) Learn about new rose varieties 3) New and old rose growing practices 4) What are the new products for this year 5) Great programs and speakers 6) Find out what other clubs are doing to promote roses For more information and registration see next two pages Get ready for another exciting rose growing season! The Buckeye District of the American Rose Society 6 2018 2 . -
October 2009 Volume 3, Page 1
by any other name the newsletter of the World Federation of RoseRose Societies’ Heritage Rose Group Contents A letter from the President Texas Teas David Ruston, Australia..............................................................................2 by Claude Graves, Texas, USA.......................................................22 Minutes of the Heritage Roses Committee Royal Roses Vancouver, 23 June 2009......................................................................3 by Sheenagh Harris, South Africa...............................................24 A rosarium for Serbia Roses on the move by Radoslav Petrovic´, Serbia.............................................................8 by Helga Brichet, Italy..............................................................................30 Roses and rose gardens of New Zealand Vacunae Rosae —portrait of a new rose garden by Doug Grant, New Zealand.............................................................10 by Gian Paolo Bonani, Italy.................................................................36 the making of Between the Rows The Canadian Hybrbridiser, Dr Felicitas Svejda by Joanne Knight, New Zealand...................................................12 by Dr Patrick White, Canada...........................................................44 Roses from cuttings by Malcolm Manners, USA.................................................................14 Pruning roses — breaking all the rules by Gregg Lowery, USA............................................................................16 -
Garden Roses and Beyond
OLD GARDEN ROSES AND BEYOND MATTHEW ORWAT UF/IFAS EXTENSION WASHINGTON COUNTY WHO WAS HUME? WHO WAS HUME? • 1904- Hume became Professor of Botany and Horticulture at the Florida Agricultural College in Lake City, Florida, University of Florida's predecessor. • Hume later became general manager Glen St. Mary Nurseries Company from 1917 to 1929, later serving as the company's president and then the chairman of its board of directors • 1930 rejoined the faculty of the University of Florida • 1938 appointed dean of the College of Agriculture • 1947 Hume was appointed the university's interim president ROSE PHILOSOPHY • “Rose time in the Lower South comes in spring and again in autumn” • Winter time is too cold, and while “everblooming varieties continue to flower during the summer throughout all the region, high temperatures and heavy rainfall in many sections make it difficult to secure good blooms” • Important to consider “too much shade, wrong exposure, and too many tree roots” • Sunlight is best: “for half the day, preferably early morning until noon, or better still for ¾ of the day is essential to success” ROSE PHILOSOPHY • Worst tree root issues: Roses cannot be pruned by rule: • Laurel Oak . Treat each bush as a separate living unit • Water Oak . Done in February for everblooming types • Camphor • Magnolia . Older shrub roses: cut out dead wood and twiggy growth is all that is necessary ROSES FOR EASE OF CARE • Hume had limited access to modern fungicides when book was published in 1929. • Most of the roses he recommended in his 1929 edition are still in commerce and available. -
Old Garden Roses
Rudolf W. van der Goot Rose Garden 2021 ROSE CLASSIFICATIONS AND CULTIVARS SPECIES & SPECIES-HYBRID ‘Canary Bird’ (Hybrid Xanthina) Rosa palustris – Swamp Rose ‘Carmenetta’ Rosa pendulina – Alpine Rose ‘Corylus’ (Hybrid Nitida) Rosa roxburghii normalis – Single Chestnut Rose ‘Highdownensis’ (Hybrid Moyesii) Rosa rubiginosa (syn. R. eglanteria) – Sweet ‘Lilian Gibson’ (Hybrid Blanda) Briar Rose Rosa canina – Dog Rose Rosa rubrifolia (syn. R. glauca) – Red Leaf Rose Rosa carolina Rosa sericea f. pteracantha – Wing-Thorned Rose Rosa foetida bicolor ‘Austrian Copper’ Rosa setigera – Prairie Rose Rosa glutinosa – Pine-Scented Rose Rosa spinosissima var. altaica Rosa laevigata – Cherokee Rose Rosa virginiana Rosa moschata – Musk Rose Rosa x micrugosa Rosa nitida – Shining Rose OLD GARDEN ROSES ALBA ‘Alba Semi-plena’ ‘Königin von Dänemark’ ‘Celestial’ ‘Maiden’s Blush’ ‘Chloris’ BOURBON ‘Boule de Neige’ ‘Madame Isaac Péreire’ ‘Gipsy Boy’ “Maggie” ‘Honorine de Brabant’ ‘Variegata di Bologna’ ‘Louise Odier’ ‘Zéphirine Drouhin’ CENTIFOLIA (CABBAGE ROSE) ‘Burgundian Rose’ ‘Petite de Hollande’ ‘Fantin-Latour’ ‘Prolifera de Redouté’ ‘Gros Choux d’Hollande’ ‘Rose de Meaux’ (syn. ‘Pompon Rose’) ‘Juno’ OLD GARDEN ROSES CHINA “Elisabeth’s China” ‘Hermosa’ ‘Eugène de Beauharnais’ ‘Old Blush’ ‘Green Rose’ DAMASK ‘Bella Donna’ ‘Kazanlik’ ‘Celsiana’ ‘Léda’ (syn. ‘Painted Damask’) ‘Duc de Cambridge’ ‘Madame Hardy’ GALLICA and HYBRID GALLICA ‘Alain Blanchard’ ‘Officinalis’ (syn. ‘Apothecary’s Rose’) ‘Belle Isis’ ‘Tuscany Superb’ ‘Camaïeux’ ‘Versicolor’ (syn. -
Wfrs Triennial Report on Roses 2015
WFRS TRIENNIAL REPORT ON ROSES 2015 Published for the World Federation of Rose Societies EDITOR Sheenagh Harris 1 WORLD FEDERATION OF ROSE SOCIETIES Founded 1968 www.worldrose.org The World Federation of Rose Societies is registered in Great Britain as a company limited by guarantee and as a charity under the number 1063582. The objectives of the Society, as stated in the constitution, are: To encourage and facilitate the interchange of information about and knowledge of the rose between national rose societies. To coordinate the holding of international conventions and exhibitions. To encourage, and where appropriate, sponsor research into problems concerning the rose. To establish common standards for judging new rose seedlings. To assist in coordinating the registration of new rose names. To establish a uniform system of rose classification. To grant international honours and/or awards. To encourage and advance international cooperation in all other matters concerning the rose. Gérald Meylan - Past President, Sheenagh Harris – Immediate Past President, Steve Jones – President, Helga Brichet - Past President, Ken Grapes, Past President at the Closing Ceremony of the WFRS Regional Convention in Barcelona in 2014 2 CONTENTS Foreword 5 Preface 6 President’s Report 8 Immediate Past President’s Report 10 WFRS Vice Presidential Reports Africa 12 Australasia - Australia 14 Australasia - New Zealand 17 Central Asia 19 Europe (N) 20 Europe (SE) 22 Europe (S) 24 Far East 26 North America - 27 North America 30 South America 32 WFRS Office Holders -
District Doings Gretchen Humphrey, PNW District Director
‘Catherine Graham’ Hybrid Tea Photo by Rich Baer In This Issue District Doings Gretchen Humphrey, PNW District Director You can email me at: [email protected] or call me at 503-539-6853 Message From the Director————— 1-2 District Horticulture Judging News—— 2-3 District CR Report—--———––——–- 3-4 Happy New Year to Everyone! District Show (Tri-City Rose Society)— 4 As we roll into a new year and a new growing season, I am excited to see what is Rose Science: Stomata: in store for us in the great Pacific Northwest. Windows to the Outside World-——– 5-6 Prizes and Awards ———————–- 7 Since our last newsletter, my husband and I traveled to the ARS National Con- Roses In Review————————— 8-9 vention in Tyler, Texas. This whirlwind weekend began with the Board Meeting on Rose Arrangement Workshop———– 10 Thursday, taking care of important ARS business. Following that was the Rose Show, Rose Arrangement School————— 11 held at the Rose Center in Tyler. This time, we didn’t bring any roses, since it was the Coming Events/Rose Show Dates—— 11 middle of October. Although that month was particularly dry, the timing of our blooms was off, and we didn’t have any worthy specimens. Old Garden Roses: The National Rose Show was rather small, although there were some beautiful What Are They?—–—————– 12-16 blooms, and some varieties we hadn’t seen before. After judging, we volunteered to guide Hybrid Gallicas——— 12-13 Damasks—————– 13-14 the busloads of visitors around the show. It turned out there weren’t that many on Friday, Albas——————— 14 but we did manage to greet a few nice folks. -
The American Rose Society
The American Rose Society Miniature and Miniflora Rose Bulletin Third Quarter 2012 Volume 27, Issue 3 Award of Excellence Winners 2013 The Miniature and Miniflora Rose Bulletin is an official quarterly journal of the American Rose Society American Rose Society P.O. Box 30,000 Shreveport, LA 71130-0030 Jeff Wyckoff - President Jolene Adams - Vice President James Hering, M.D. ARS President Emeritus and Chairman of the Miniature and Miniflora Rose Committee Philip Paul, Editor 11006 Bullrush Terrace Lakewood Ranch, FL 34202-4145 E-mail: [email protected] © 2012 The American Rose Society This publication is for rosarians who are interested in miniature and miniflora roses. The advice and information in this publication is believed to be true and accurate as of the date of publication. The authors, editors, and the American Rose Society assume no legal re- sponsibility for errors and omissions that may have been made. Dates of Interest to Mini and Miniflora Rosarians: ARS 2012 Fall National Convention & Rose Show September 27-30, 2012 - San Ramon, CA See the ARS Website for Details Cover Photo: ARS Award of Excellence Winners for 2013 Photos Courtesy of Weeks Roses (See Page 8) ARS Miniature and Miniflora Bulletin 2 Third Quarter 2012 In This Issue: Dates of Interest ...…......….......................................... 2 Editor’s Notes .................................................................3 ARS Miniature/Miniflora Hall of Fame Winners …....4 ARS Award of Excellence Winners …………………...8 Remembering Mitchie Moe by Caroline Fredette …..14 Recent Registrations - Miniatures ……………………16 Recent Registrations - Minifloras …………………….17 Editor’s Notes: In his issue we have the results of both the ARS Miniature & Miniflora Hall of Fame Win- ners for 2012 and the ARS Award of Excellence Winners for 2013. -
Her Royal Highness Crown Princess Mary Is Patron of the 18Th World Rose Convention
Volume 29 • Number 2 • May, 2018 Her Royal Highness Crown Princess Mary is Patron of the 18th World Rose Convention May, 2018 1 Contents Editorial 2 President’s Message 3 All about the President 4 Immediate PP Message 6 New Executive Director 8 WFRS World Rose Convention – Lyon 9 Pre-convention Tours Provence 9 The Alps 13 Convention Lecture Programme Post Convention Tours Diary of Events WFRS Executive Committee Standing Com. Chairmen Member Societies Associate Members and Breeders’ Club Friends of the Federation I am gragteful EDITORIAL CONTENT This is the nineteenth issue of WRN since I was invited to be Editor Editorial 2 towards the end of 2012. It has been an enlightening 6 years, President’s Message 3 sometimes positive and sometimes not. The Editor is vulnerable to criticism, but the many emails of gratitude and encouragement World Rose Convention made it all so worthwhile. In particular I enjoyed the contact with The Story of Poulsen Roses 4 rosarians throughout the world. I tried to include as many WFRS Std. Com. Reports different people as possible and from a variety of member Awards 7 countries of the world and I hope they have looked upon it as an Breeders’ Club 7 Classification & Registration 8 honour and not a chore. Cons. & Heritage Roses 8 Convention Liaison 9 Seven pages are devoted to the important reports from the Honours 10 International Judges 11 Chairmen of Standing Committees. Here we have good coverage International Rose Trials 11 of the governance of the WFRS – what goes on behind the scenes Promotions 12 keeping the wheels going round.