August 2006 - Mesa-East Valley – Rose Society
Transcription
August 2006 - Mesa-East Valley – Rose Society
Our National Floral Emblem Award winning newletter! National ARS Silver Medal 2004, Honorable Mention 2005 Rose Lore Mesa-East Valley Rose Society Affiliated with the American Rose Society Dona L. Martin, Editor www.roses4az-mevrs.org more petals. Quite nice. ‘Falling In Love’ - Pink hybrid tea with superb form. Notes from It has already received two Chris Greenwood trophies, in Santa Clarita's show last fall and was in Roses so new, they are not to the second place Nickelson be found on the internet! This entry in Seattle, misnamed. writer has the following infor- Resembles a more colorful mation, however, from Chris ‘Moonstone.’ Greenwood of Armstrong Nurseries in California. These Watercolors - Shrub - This gorgeous rose was absolutely great varieties from Tom stunning at Carlsbad last Carruth of Weeks Roses will spring. It presents lovely be available exclusively at single petalled flowers that their nurseries beginning in remind one of Mutablis. January. Don’t forget to put a trip to Armstrong on your agenda if traveling that way! ‘Carol Burnett’ - Nice warm apricot floribunda with good hybrid tea form. ‘Hinkydinky’ - Scarlett polyantha. A superb rose, it was the highest scoring rose ‘The Imposter’ - Shrub This five petalled rose is pink in the AARS trials. It wasn't awarded, however, because it with deep pink flecks and had blackspot report...not a quite lovely. When I saw it in Wasco, they were in a middle problem in our weather! of a 100 degree heat wave ‘Candy Land’ - Nice pink and the plant was no the worse for wear. Low and striped climber. This one is similiar to Berries 'n Cream semi-spreading, it’s a real cutie. It was one of the hot (one of this writer’s favorites!), but the flowers have roses at Pacific Rose Society New Armstrong Roses For 2007 Thursday August 8th, 7:00 p.m. Monthly meeting, MCC Elsner Library Community Room A Summer Double Dip! “New Roses For 2007” By LeRoy Brady & “Reviving Your Summer Roses For Fall” By Larry Bell Your friends and family are always welcome. Refreshments will be served. Bring your rose questions and concerns. What’s inside this issue... New Roses - Notes from Chris Greenwood 1 President’s Message - Dona Martin 2 Rose Care For August 3 Parlez Vous Roses? - Paddy Ruzella 4-5 In The Garden With...Barb & Charlie Schoenberg - Linda Ahlborn 6-7 Pruners 101 - Mike Denson 8 Rose of the Month: ‘Mozart’ - Dona Martin 9 New Booklet / AZ State Fair - Get ready! 10 Membership/Officers/Consulting Rosarians 11 August 2006 August 2006 Rose Lore Page 1 MEMBERSHIP DISCOUNTS The following nurseries will give MEVRS members a 10% discount (unless otherwise indicated) on any rose-related purchase when you show your membership card. In some stores you must pay by cash or check only to receive the discount. Be sure to get your annual Membership Card from the Membership Chairman. A & P Nurseries All three East Valley locations (15% off all products, except Advertised Specials.) Pine needle mulch came in 7/15 and is now bagged! Baker’s Nursery 3414 N. 40th St., Phx Berridge Nursery 4647 E. Camelback Rd., Phx Potted roses always in stock! Gardener’s World 3401 E. Baseline Rd., Phx Harper’s Nursery Three locations: Mesa, Scottsdale and Phx 480-964-4909 (Mesa) Summer Winds Nursery 3160 S. Country Club Dr., Mesa 480-892-1469 Treeland Nursery 2900 S. Country Club Dr., Mesa 480-497-2525 When you patronize these businesses, please remember to thank the manager for supporting the MEVRS! August 2006 President’s Message By Dona Martin We have all had a busy month, and a hot, windy one as well. One of the highlights of the month was the “Composition In Photography” program presented by photographer, Nancy Sams, at our July meeting. Pleased with the response, she offered to do a free beginning Photoshop workshop of us. It is being held right after my MCC Community Education class, which happens to be tomorrow. We are looking forward to having about 24 members attend this time and already have a list started for a later class this fall. Photography is such a great hobby and meshes well with growing roses. More members have digital cameras and are online than ever before. When I started the website in 1998, there were only about six of us with email! We also now have 24 members signed up to receive the “paperless” newsletter, by email only. Anyone who would like to be added to that list need only email me about it. That many alone will save about $120 a year, plus labor (usually mine…) I hope you are taking time to review it when it is emailed to you, as I am adding more color pictures for your enjoyment and education. American Rose Society Awards of Merit for Articles and for Special Publications have been announced for 2005. I am proud to announce that four MEVRS members received awards for their articles. Marylou Coffman (“Elements and Principles of Design”), LeRoy Brady (“Veteran’s Garden Update”) and I (“What To Know Before You Buy Roses”) have received one Award of Merit each for articles written. Bob Martin received five awards! (“The Point of Prickles Portland”, “Earth Worms and Roses: If You Feeded Them, They Will Come”, “Spidermites”, “Those Semi-Circular Slices”, “The Show and the Single Rose”). Congratulations to these members! Special Awards of Merit are awarded for booklets, pamphlets and other more substantive, individual documents that are submitted for review to the ARS Publications Committee. Nine of these awards were given in the nation, five of which were for publications originating in the Pacific Southwest District! Of these five, two were awarded to Dona Martin. The first edition of our booklet, Growing Roses In The Desert Southwest and the first MEVRS Auction Catalog, both from 2005, received Special Awards of Merit. The Mesa-East Valley Rose Society is now the only society in the country represented with winning entries in all four categories: Local Newsletter, Website, individual Awards of Merit and Special Publication Awards of Merit. Finally, we are already working on preparations for our Annual Rose and Arrangement Show, always held on the third Saturday of November in the Kirk Student Center. LeRoy Brady is the Show Chairman. We want to encourage your participation on some level, as the experiences gained will only add to your understanding of and enjoyment of the rose! Watch for more information on the show. Have a great month and start the countdown to fall! Rose Lore Page 2 Rose Care for August 2006 by Dona Martin, ARS Consulting Rosarian Amazingly enough, we have made it to the home stretch after another record breaking hot summer! After the hottest June ever, we now have only August, September and yes, October’s pretty hot, too. But the good news is, it is already starting to cool off at night little by little. The rains have helped us and our gardens a lot. So for now, do much the same as what you did in July (which is why these instructions sound almost the same!) If we are lucky enough to have some more monsoon storms, so much the better! IRRIGATION - If you flood irrigate, water deeply three times a week. If you drip irrigate, water four times per week (we water five times a week), a minimum of 3 to 4 gallons each time. Water needs to be able to soak down 18” below the surface of the bed. Notice how long it takes for the wells around the roses to drain. If water sits for too long, you may need to add a soil sulfur product such as Dispersul, which helps open up the soil structure by reducing the alkalinity. Deep watering all areas at least once every two weeks will help push salts out of the root zones. Another way to do this is by watering a second time in the same day once a month. This allows the water to move lower and wider, washing the salts in the soil further away from the root system. This helps prevent salt burn on the plant. If you grow roses in pots, water seven times per week because of more rapid transpiration and lower capacity. . It is also good to hose off your roses at least once week, more if you can. Continue to use a water wand, with an adjustable jet nozzle on the end. Spray the top and undersides of the leaves. This will increase the humidity around the bushes, clean off the dusty leaves and knock off any lingering spider mites you might have. (If spider mites continue to be destructive, there are a number of good miticides on the market. These include Avid, Hexygon, and Floramite, the best but priciest.) food like Bandini or Organo brands. Do not forget to water deeply both before and after fertilizing, very important steps to prevent fertilizer burn damage. Roses and other plants still need to be fed during the summer so that they will be healthy enough to start growing again when the weather becomes more hospitable. Roses have a reduced need for fertilizer when temperatures are so high, but do not like being starved. DEADHEADING – Continue to remove spent blooms regularly. We have found that cutting right below the spent bloom and leaving as many leaves as possible results in healthier plants for two reasons. First, more leaves are present to provide more protection of the canes from the sun. Second, there are more leaves providing nutrition to the plant. This is especially important if spider mites hit, causing the loss of leaves on the lower half of the bush. GET READY - Starting to clean up your garden a little at a time will make our Fall Pruning job easier as we hit the end of September. Hang in there and call a CR if you need advice. Our gardens this fall are going to be terrific! MCC Deadheaders! Get out your calendars and save September 16th, 23rd and 30th, tentatively, for Fall Pruning and cleanup at the MCC Rose Garden. All hands are needed “on deck,” so we hope you can volunteer at some point during that time. Come have a great time! FERTILIZING – You should have fertilized at half rate in early June and mid-July. If so, the next application would be the end of August. If not, fertilize now and again in four weeks. Use a good ORGANIC fertilizer like Groganic, available from Mike Jepsen, along with alfalfa meal, applying 1/2 c. of each. Top dress fertilizer and water in. Alternatively, you can use a 1/4 c. of a time release rose August 2006 Rose Lore Page 3 I Wonder... Parlez-vous Rose ? BY PADDY RUZELLA Reprinted from the May/June 2006 issue of The Ventura Rose Are you ever confused by some of the words you hear or read about when it comes to roses? I know I am. Sometimes when I’m reading a book, I’ll come across a word and I find myself asking, I wonder what that means? If I can’t get the gist of it by reading the next sentence or two, then I have to look up the word. Words have always fascinated me and I love a book where I find myself writing down words to look up in the dictionary later. But with the rose books, the dictionary is generally a glossary in the back of the book…if I’m lucky. Let’s try and sort out some of the more confusing terminology. If we manage to get one or two of them into our language use when speaking or reading about roses, then we shall have moved a little further towards the lovely title of “rosarian.” According to Webster, a rosarian is a cultivator of roses. So, if you are reading this article, then you most likely grow roses and, wonder of wonders, that makes you a rosarian! Let’s talk a little bit about the rose flower. I admit to having a difficult time keeping the names attached to the various parts that make up the blossom straight. So, humor me will you, and let me try and describe a rose blossom. The first part is easy petals – are a never ending source of delight if you study them. The manner in which petals open from their buds, the number to each rose – from the basic five to over fifty, the way they curl or cup, their thickness, their smooth or wavy edges – would make an article by itself! Next, in the center of the rose is its reproductive tract. What we generally see are the stamens, small hair-like upright stalks with a bump at the top. Each stamen is made up of a filament (the stalk), and an anther (the bump), on which the pollen forms. When it comes to exhibiting roses, we know by now, that the judges want these stamens to be fresh! The other parts of the flower are the five green, small, leaflike covers of the bud, the sepals. August 2006 As the bud swells and gets ready to open, the sepals go from being upward growing to downward growing. I read somewhere that if you pick a rose bud and want it to open into a flower, the sepals need to be at least halfway through that downward movement, horizontal to the bud. Incidentally, before the sepals make themselves known, and while they are still a tight covering over the emerging bud, they are known as the calyx. Further down the rose stem you have the bud eyes. These are small bumps or nodes, red or green, from which all new growth on the plant will emerge. These are not to be confused with the bud union, which is the knob near the base of the rose where it was grafted to its rootstock. You probably already know that there are two types of roses, those grown on their own roots (propagated from a cutting, which first forms roots and then grows leaves and flowers) and those budded to a stronger, already developed rootstock from an entirely different rose. At the bottom of the plant, look out for suckers. These are new shoots coming from the bottom of the plant below the bud union. If you have a grafted plant, you want only new growth from or just above the bud union to maintain the integrity of your plant. In the case of a plant on its own root system, of course this new growth will be the same as your plant. It’s up to you to decide how much you want to keep. Often you will keep the new growth and cut out some of the older canes. You will also come across the terms basal break or basal shoots, this means the strong new growth coming directly from or just above the bud union. Die back refers to an area at the top of a rose stem or cane that begins to die off from its top turning brown and then black. It may go all the way back to a stronger cane or stem of the rose or it may just go for a few inches and then stop at a node and eventually start producing new growth. This phenomenon is sometimes caused by improper pruning, but other times happens just because the rose takes a fancy to doing its own pruning. Either way, it is recommended that we cut off the die back. How about the word remontant? If a rose is described as remontant, the rose has the ability to flower more than once in a season. Jim Delahanty Rose Lore (Continued on page 5) Page 4 (Continued from page 4) tells me that the word originally meant the rose had a heavy bloom in the spring with a lesser bloom in the fall, as happens in with the Hybrid Perpetual roses, but now means any rose with more than one flush of bloom. Repeat blooming also means the rose blooms more than once in a season. But continuous blooming means the rose continues to bloom throughout the season, generally until the first frost if there is one. Then there is the flush of roses. Flush simply means the flowering period for a rose. Its first flush of the season is the time when it is putting forth its first full bloom of the season. Jim also explained to me that the normal span between flushes is about 42 or more days. With the shortest span being 36 days for the ever effervescent “Betty Boop.” To finish up we might just start at the beginning. What is meant by the word, species? A species rose is a wild rose. Wild roses have existed for millions of years as evidenced by fossil finds. Only relatively recently man started to “mess” with roses, cross pollinating them and thereby hybridizing and genetically engineering them to produce the huge variety of roses that exist today. However, whenever you see a rose listed as “r. (rose name)” such as, “r. rugosa,” you know it is a species rose, one that is pretty much unaltered from its natural form. Incidentally, the “r” stands for “rosa,” the Latin word for rose. It is the species roses that started it all and thus must bear the responsibility of making each of us a rosarian! THE VENTURA ROSE, edited by Jim Delahanty, is published by the Ventura County Rose Society. MEVRS Publicity Team By Steve Sheard The Publicity Team needs you—or your thoughts at least. We have proven to ourselves time and time again that when we get good publicity, we get the response from the public we are looking for. The Publicity Team needs your help. This area has grown so quickly that we know there are lots of new sources of publicity for the Team to contact. Please do not go on to the next article until you have picked up a pencil and answered the following simple questions. Please do not assume that someone else will answer these so you need not bother. We have over 200 members – We would like to see over 200 responses, we will sort out the duplicates. • What newspaper do you read? • Does your neighborhood have a local newspaper (e.g., Warner Wrangler)? • Do you get any local magazines? • What Radio Station do you listen to? • Do you watch any gardening shows on TV? • What movie theatre do you prefer? • Do you know of any other garden related club or society? • Do you know of any local garden related web sites? • Do you know of any local tourist related web sites? • Do you know of any tourist related publications? • Anything else you want to share? We will NOT ask you to contact anyone – unless you volunteer. We will ONLY use this information to help publicize our activities. Please send your answers to Steve Sheard at [email protected] 480 831 2609, or to Larry Bell at [email protected] 480 706 9667. PLEASE put in the email subject line “MEVRS – Publicity”. THANK YOU!! August 2006 Rose Lore Page 5 In the garden with… Barbara and Charlie Schoenberg By Linda Ahlborn How would you describe your rose garden? Could you detail, for instance, quantity, types, whether they are in the ground or in containers? We have approximately 500 rose bushes- we have lost count. They are all in the ground. We grow a little of each kind; however I have come to appreciate the English roses and the Polyanthas the most. I grew to like the Polyanthas after I met Bob Martin and saw his great collection. Did you grow up with roses? Were members of your family involved in gardening? I grew up on a 100 Acre farm in Alabama and there were roses in our little town. We had a beautiful prolific Pink Rambler which had very large sprays of flowers in the spring. I have never been able to find that rose again. It is not Seven Sisters as I have tried that one and it isn't the one. I especially like the Cherokee Rose, which grows wild in Alabama but does not do well in my garden here. My Grandmother was an avid gardener and I imagine that my love of gardening came from her. I like to grow things here that are not normally grown here. The Cahaba Lily is one that I have enjoyed bringing from my cousin's yard in Alabama and sharing with my gardening friends. It has been declared an endangered species plant and now only grows along the Shoals in the Cahaba River in Alabama and in a few places in Georgia. Several years ago, I paid for a trophy in my Grandmother Jessie Belle Carlee's name. Cahaba Lily Can you share one secret to growing great roses? We flood irrigate very deeply every thirteen days in addition to our regular drip system of three times a week. Cherokee Rose, left, backyard playground, above (Continued on page 7) August 2006 Rose Lore Page 6 (Continued from page 6) Have you ever exhibited? I did exhibit once and won the Beginners [Novice] Trophy for Lavaglut, but have not done so since. So many exhibitors spend a lot of extra time preparing their roses. Our garden is large and we grow many other plants and trees, so we just do what we can and hope they all survive! I love to see the beautiful specimens that our exhibitors bring, especially those who win the Horticulture awards. Those are so outstanding and lovely. Who were your Rosarian mentors? I introduced Dona Martin to roses and she has become such an avid rosarian, that she has become my mentor. I enjoy starting roses from cuttings and appreciate the ones I have received from Carol Poe and Dona and Bob Martin. What was the best advice anyone has ever given you about roses? The best advice that anyone has ever given me came from Mary Lou Coffman: “Join a local Rose Society.” Do you have any advice to someone just starting out? “Join a local Rose Society - and hire Mike Jepsen to fertilize your roses!!” Have you held offices relating to rose-growing in the Valley? I held the office of Secretary in the Mesa-East Valley Rose Society soon after I joined. Then I became more active in the East Valley Men's Garden Club and held the offices of Secretary, Newsletter Editor, Publicity Director and President. The first order of business when I was elected President was to get the name changed. It was voted on and decided to be called the East Valley Gardeners Club. August 2006 Rose Lore Page 7 Pruners 101: Sharpening Your Pruning Tools Remove the plate behind the nut. The bolt that holds the pruners together By Michael Denson will slide out and the blade should Get your pruners ready for separate easily from the handles. fall pruning! Sometimes this may be difficult beLet's take a few minutes to take a cause of a little rust or grimy buildup. close look at your pruning tools. When Spray some Liquid Wrench® on the was the last time they were sharptrouble spot and wait a few hours‹let ened? What shape are they in? Are the solvent do the work. the blades sharp? Is there any visible rust? Is the blade nicked up? Do they Drench the parts with WD40. close smoothly or do they sound gritty when you open and close them? Cleaning the Parts If you think your pruners need sharpening or cleaning, they probably do! It's easy to talk yourself out of taking care of your pruners: "I don't know how," "They're okay till next year," "I'll just buy a new pair!" Stop right there! I want to tell you about the easiest, fastest way to maintain and care for your pruning equipment! What You Need • WD 40® or other silicone-based lubricant • A sheet of sandpaper (400 grit) or/and an SOS pad • A screwdriver • A clean rag • A wrench • A sharpening stone or GATCO® Sharpening System Look at the blade. Serious nicks will be impossible to "sharpen out", so it may be best to replace the blade. Felco pruner blades and other parts are available at good garden centers at reasonable cost. If the blade is dull, lay it flat on your worktable. Clean with an SOS pad, first folding the rag and placing it against the sharp side to keep from cutting yourself. Scrub the blade clean. You may need to use sandpaper to polish. Turn the blade over and clean the other side. Next, clean the anvil. The blade has to slide directly against the anvil, so you must remove hardened sap, dirt, etc. Look at each piece, clean it thoroughly, and buff with a rag till it shines. Sharpening the Blade Sharpening blades is not difficult. I use a foolproof GATCO Sharpener Disassemble the Pruners Edgemate System F-J-61-0561, availDon't be intimidated! Think of pruners able from Cabela's, One Cabela Drive, as a jigsaw puzzle with 8-10 pieces Sidney, NE 69160, (1-800-237-444) (or maybe only 4 pieces)! which makes sharpening very easy. Three models are available ($26.99, If you've been taking good care of $36.99, and $59.99). your pruners and lubricating them properly, they should be easy to take This system has a rod-hone handle apart. If you haven't, you may need a and features a permanently affixed little elbow grease. If the "catch" that rod so the sharpening angle remains locks the pruners into a closed posiconstant. A series of sharpening tion moves easily, I would not remove stones ranging from coarse to ultra it--just spray it with a lubricant. fine are provided. The stones fit into a groove that holds the blade at the Next, remove the screw that holds the precise angle needed for superior small odd shaped piece, which holds sharpness and durability. the "toothed nut" in position. You may need to use a small wrench to remove To sharpen, start with the coarse the nut if it is tight and cannot be re- stone. Run the blade through in a cir moved by hand. August 2006 Rose Lore cular motion several times until it feels smooth when gently touched, If the nicks are gone, repeat the process on the next finest stone. Continue until the blade is sharp, sharp. That's all! It took me 60 minutes to disassemble and sharpen 5 pairs of Felco bypass pruners! If you are using a hand-held stone instead of the GATCO System, run the stone along the blade from the handle to the point at a 10-20 degree angle. Try to maintain a constant angle! Very sharp angles produce razor sharp blades. More parallel angles (25-30 degrees) give long lasting but less sharp edges. Reassembly Spray each piece with lubricant. Place the blade onto the handle, put the bolt in from underneath, put the other handle flat through the bolt, then the backing plate, and then the toothed nut. Hand tighten the nut until the blades are almost difficult to open, then back it off a little. Match the funny shaped sprocket onto the nut and tighten the screw. The pruners should open and close like sharp scissors at this point. Back the screw out two turns and squirt lubricant in. Tighten up with the screwdriver and replace the spring. You should now be ready for serious pruning! Caring for your Pruners Clean your pruners after each use. If you don't have time to scrub them and clean off the dirt and sap, at least wash them with water and spray with a shot of WD40 or other silicone based spray. These products repel water and retard rust and oxidation. Pruners need special care, especially if you disinfect the blades with Clorox®. Sharpen once a month for superior cutting. This should be a breeze -- ten minutes tops! Your roses will love you for it! Reprinted from Hiptalk, January 2003 Page 8 August 2006 Rose of the Month: ‘Mozart’ Hybrid Musk by Peter Lambert, Germany By Dona Martin ‘Mozart’ landscaping. They make good specimen plants, grown free standing or as a ‘Mozart’ blooms with brilliant gold stamens in hedge, and can also a white eye. Hybrid Musks all set hips well. be grown against a wall or on a support, like an obelisk, Among the earliest of the Classic for vertical accents. Like its cousin, Shrub roses, the Hybrid Musk roses the more famous ‘Ballerina,’ ‘Mozart’ where first developed in 1904. Peter will grow 3’ to 4’ high and 5’ to 6’ Lambert of Germany named the first wide. Only very light pruning is necvariety ‘Trier’, after his hometown. It essary to shape them up or keep was from ‘Trier’ that the most famous them within a designated space. To Hybrid Musks were developed, in the encourage later flowering, the spent period from 1913 to 1926. These trusses should be cut back to the seccame from the work of a retired cler- ond set of leaflets after the first flush gyman, Reverend Joseph Pemberton of bloom. If the plants become leggy in England. over the course of time, one or more Lambert continued as well with his of their main shoots may be cut back breeding programs and in 1937, he fairly hard to induce fresh growth introduced the Hybrid Musk, ‘Mozart.’ from the base. He bred this variety from Pemberton’s 1927 medium red Musk, ‘Robin Hood,’ and Rote Pharisaer, a large flowered hybrid tea with medium red blooms, bred in Germany by Hinner. This floriferous shrub has enormous flushes of bright cerise-pink 1” blooms with white centers, borne in long trusses on gracefully arching canes. The blooms have from 4 to 8 petals and while only a light fragrance, it will repeat bloom throughout the season. It is shade tolerant, a good choice for an area with dappled sunlight, and, like most Hybrid Musks, is extremely disease resistant. Hybrid Musk, ‘Erfurt’, smaller shrub These qualities make Hybrid Musks than the others, delicate in color and among the best shrub choices for moderate in size. August 2006 Rose Lore Bishop Darlington, pale apricot, with darker apricot reverse on the center “petaloids”, small curled petals surrounding the stamens. Hybrid Musks grow very well in Arizona in full sun, but will better retain their color in partial or late afternoon shade. In addition to ‘Ballerina’, I have grown stunning ‘Buff Beauty’ on an obelisk with great success, and a smaller shrub with a larger 3” flower, ‘Erfurt’, in a moderately shady area. Another unusual Hybrid Musk, which grows more upright, is ‘Bishop Darlington.’ **See these beautiful blooms in color in the pdf copy of the newsletter. Page 9 All About Growing Great Roses In The Desert Southwest 2nd Edition We know have a new printing of our excellent booklet on all aspects of rose care, selection, planting, maintenance and much more! Newly updated. Still $10 for the Award Winning 56 page book! Available at most rose society events, by mail or email. HOW TO RECEIVE OUR EMAILS! To receive the MEVRS emails regarding activities, the newsletter and other communications, please be sure that Madge Thomas’s e-mail address is in your address book! [email protected] ARS National Convention Schedule Join the American Rose Society and join us at these great events! Meet rosarians from around the country, see area gardens and attend educational seminars, so it’s tax deductible! October 13-16, 2006 ARS Fall National Convention InterContinental Dallas Hotel, Dallas TX Contact: Claude & Pam Graves 972-234-5184 / 972-907-8198 (fax) Meet Me At The Fair! People love to see a beautiful rose. People love to receive a beautiful rose. There are many people who are skeptical that beautiful roses can be grown in Arizona. Here is an opportunity to share your beautiful roses with many more people and help recruit new members for our Rose Society as well. The Arizona State Fair, October 13TH – November 5th, will be visited by well over 1,000,000 persons, with one of the major attractions being the Floriculture Hall. More than half of the exhibit space in the Floriculture Hall is set aside for ROSES. We have this PRIME space to interact with the public and share with them our roses – yet we had fewer than five rose growers in the entire state share their roses in 2005! An added Bonus for sharing your roses – the show is divided into five “mini” rose shows where the roses are judged and ribbons and PRIZE MONEY awarded. With our current LOW number of exhibitors, EVERYONE is guaranteed to come home with more money than what they paid to enter. Just one blue ribbon will net $3.00. An entry fee of $3.00 covers the complete show – plus you can get free parking and entry tickets to the rest of the fair. If nothing else, share your roses to raise a few dollars to pay for the next bag of fertilizer. Please consider exhibiting at this year’s Arizona State fair and share your Roses to build our Societies. Visit www.azstatefair.com August 2006 Rose Lore Page 10 Mesa– East Valley Rose Society You or your recipient will receive our monthly 8-12 page newsletter, local nursery discounts and more. Membership is $20, due June 1 of each year. This is for a single or family unit living at the same address. New members joining after September pay $5 per quarter, from quarter joining through the following May, payable in full at month of joining. Please bring your completed application and payment (please make check payable to MEVRS) to a meeting or mail to: MEVRS/Membership, P.O. Box 40394, Mesa, AZ 85274-0394 Date__________ New________ *Gift*________ Renewal________ Amount Paid ____________ Cash_____________ Check#_______________________ Names:__________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ Address _______________________________________________ City State Zip ______________ Phone ( ) _____ E-mail address__________________________________________ _________Yes! I would also like to join the national organization with which we are affiliated, the American Rose Society, for which I will receive the monthly American Rose magazine, the December American Rose Annual, the “Handbook For Selecting Roses” and more! I am including in my check an additional amount of $37.00 for a one year membership. **Please note! By joining the ARS through the local society, $5.00 of the cost will come directly back to us. Thank you for your support! Consulting Rosarians Standing Committees Auction Chairman………...Cheryl Doan.................. 480-838-4062 Audit………………………... tbd Historian……………………...Stephanie Pietz............. 480-969-3398 …………........................ Evelyn Gannon ............. 480-857-3090 Hospitality .................... Terri Sovereign ............. 480-892-0972 Librarian....................... Alice Flick..................... 480-839-4563 ................................... Cathy Obermiller, Asst. .. 480-786-9186 Membership.................. Donna Dibble ............... 480-380-4592 New Member Orientation Dave Dibble, Asst.......... 480-380-4592 Newsletter, Editor.......... Dona Martin ................. 480-807-3475 Member Emails.............. Madge Thomas ............. 480-834-1130 MCC Test Garden........... LeRoy Brady................. 480-962-9603 ................................... Marylou Coffman........... 480-926-3064 ................................... Dave Presley ................ 480-699-6562 Publicity Team .............. Member volunteers Rose Garden Volunteers . Carol Poe ..................... 480-895-7793 ................................... Sam Presley ................. 480-699-6562 Rose Show Chairman ..... LeRoy Brady................. 480-962-9603 Ways & Means .............. Mike Jepsen ................. 602-312-1813 Bruce Gannon............... 480-857-3090 Web site....................... Dona Martin ................. 480-807-3475 Larry Bell* (Ahwatukee Foothills)…………………..480-706-9667 Helen Baird*(NPhx, Sctsdle)…………………………..602-953-0279 LeRoy Brady* (Mesa) …………………………………..480-962-9603 Jeannie Cochell (NE Valley)[email protected] .....602-493-0238 Marylou Coffman* (Gilbert) ...........................480-926-3064 Jo Ann Erickson (Mesa)..................................480-890-1480 Phyllis Henslin (Mesa, Apache Jct.) ..................480-807-3592 Millie Hisey* (Apache Jct-winter).....................480-288-0472 Carole Holkenbrink (Chandler) ........................480-962-8227 Michael & Cindy Jepsen (Tempe) ...................602-312-1813 Ken & Peggy Jones (West Phoenix) ................623-931-5004 Arveda Larson* (Scottsdale)..........................602-953-3832 Terry* & Heidi* Leavitt (Phoenix)....................602-971-0179 Dave* & Gerry* Mahoney (Glndl/Peoria) ..........623-581-3756 Bob*# & Dona Martin (Mesa/Gilbert) ...............480-807-3475 Nelson Mitchell* (Peoria) ..............................623-412-1586 Steve Sheard (Tempe, Chandler).....................480-831-2609 John F. Green (Tucson) .................................520-795-2964 Margaret “Peggy” A. Hughes (Prescott)…………...928-541-0265 Cathy Rose (Tucson)………………………………….520-722-0010 Terry Schick (Flagstaff)………………………………….928-853-0653 Liz Strong (Tucson)[email protected]……. 520-797-7890 Terry Swartz*(Tucson)……………………………….520-623-8285 *ARS Judge #PSW District Director August 2006 Rose Lore Page 11 Meetings are held at 7:00 pm on the 2nd Thursday of each month at Mesa Community College: Paul Elsner Library Community Room 1833 W. Southern Ave., Mesa, AZ New Member Orientation at 6:30 pm Calendar of Events Third Saturdays - 8 am Volunteer Care at MCC Rose Garden. August 5th - 9 a.m. to noon, “Growing Rose in the Desert Southwest”, MCC Community Education class, taught by Dona Martin. Register at MCC website or by phone with MCC. August 10th - 7 p.m. Monthly meeting - A Summer Double Dip! LeRoy Brady on “New Roses For 2007” and Larry Bell on “Reviving Your Summer Roses For Fall” Check out our ARS Award Winning website: The Rose: www.roses4az-mevrs.org Our National Dues were due June 1st! Please help us finish up this year’s membership drive! Floral Emblem All articles for the newsletter must be submitted to the Editor by the 20th of each month. Mesa-East Valley Rose Society Executive Officers President 1st Vice President 2nd Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Past-President Dona Martin LeRoy Brady Donna Dibble Stephanie Pietz Pam Thuillez Alta Russell Steve Sheard Rose Lore Dona L. Martin, Editor Mesa-East Valley Rose Society Inc. PO Box 40394 Mesa, AZ 85274-0394 ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED Board of Directors Cheryl Doan Bruce Gannon Evelyn Gannon Sam Presley Madge Thomas Visit us at: www.roses4az-mevrs.org Developers of The Rose Garden at Mesa Community College, the largest public rose garden in the Desert Southwest! August 2006 Dues were due June 1st! Rose Lore Page 12