The Ventura Rose
Transcription
The Ventura Rose
The Ventura Rose The Ventura Rose Published by the Ventura County Rose Society —An Affiliate of the American Rose Society VCRS January Meeting & Presentation ***January 22, 2015 *** Tom Carruth from Weeks Roses “Roses at the Huntington Library Gardens” Doors open at 6:30 p.m. for refreshments Rose Sharing & Celebration 7:00 p.m. Guest Speaker Presentation 7:30 p.m. 5100 Adolfo Road, Camarillo, CA www. venturarose.org Musings from Elton MacPherson Hello Fellow Lovers, Rose On a very rainy Saturday, January 10, the VCRS conducted a rose workshop/ outreach at Green Thumb Nursery in Ventura. Dawn-Marie Johnson and Connie Estes arrived early to set up the table (see photos inside this issue) with cut roses, copies of our December newsletter and New Member forms. They were soon j oin ed by Barbara Morse and Karen Fitzpatrick. I joined Dawn-Marie for the afternoon shift. Sometimes rain comes at inconvenient times but I think our outreach was successful. We made a new source (Green Thumb) for getting the word out about what we do. We met and chatted with some really nice people. We picked up some potential new members. My thanks to DawnMarie, Connie, Barbara and Karen for their participation. I’ll see you at the next meeting on January 22. Elton MacPherson VCRS President Board Meeting The new 2015 VCRS Board will meet at 5:00 pm prior to the regular m e e ti n g , same location and same room. To be put on the agenda, please email Elton at [email protected] Tom Carruth Tom Carruth is currently the curator of the rose collection at the Huntington Library. He is an award-winning rose hybridizer and leading rose expert. He formerly was the director of research, marketing and licensing at Weeks Roses. He hybridized many of the roses in our gardens today. VCRS Dues VCRS Dues are due again! And what a bargain! One year membership for only $20. Please bring to the meeting or mail to Earl Holst, VCRS treasurer, P.O. Box 102, Agoura Hills, CA 91376-0102. Make payable to VCRS. Thank you! Volume 22 Number 1 January 2015 Inside this issue: Photos! 2 More Photos! 3 Special Notices 3 The Peace Rose 4 Schedule of Events 4 Board Members & 4 Committee Chairs SILENT AUCTION A surprise awaits you at our January meeting! In lieu of our money raising raffle, we will have a Silent Auction. The auction will include pl ants, gardenin g an d decorative items and books. Three roses donated by Otto & Sons Nursery for our auction were hybridized by our guest speaker, Tom Carruth (4th of July, Barbra Streisand, Julia Child). For a good time, come early and stay late. Don’t forget your cash or checkbook. Your participation will help the VCRS budget stay afloat! Connie Estes Consulting Rosarian Page 2 The Ventura Rose Having Too Much Fun at the Holiday Party ! Did you hide your gift under the table hoping that no one would notice? Or did you display it proudly, hoping that it would be stolen and go home with someone else? To Connie Estes & Dawn-Marie Johnson for planning this fun event and to those who brought goodies to share! It was an evening of laughter and fellowship for VCRS rose lovers! Page 3 The Ventura Rose Green Thumb Rose Days Stagecoach Inn “Pruning Party” Come over on Saturday morning, January 24, and help prune the rose garden. Kathy Ayers and Sue Rosecrans could use your help. Bring your clippers, gloves and a bucket to collect your cuttings. This group is know for going out for a good lunch afterwards! 51 S. Ventu Park Road just south of the 101 freeway in Newbury Park. Thank you to those who helped at our Community Outreach on January 10. And thank you to Dawn-Marie Johnson for the photos on these two pages. Shh… The word around town is that Connie Estes is cleaning out an immense quantity of wonderful items to be placed in the auction, but you didn’t read it here...don’t be late and bring a fat wallet with money in it! Page 4 The Ventura Rose Board Members The Ventura County Rose Society www.venturarose.org Copyright ©2015 Ventura County Rose President: Elton MacPherson Treasurer: Earl Holst Secretary: Teresa Reese Members-at-Large: Dawn-Marie Johnson, Nell August, Kathy Ayers, Dr. Ken Kerr, Janet Sklar Coming Soon January 22: Tom Carruth Roses at the Huntingdon January 24: Stagecoach Inn Pruning time! 51 S. Ventu Park Rd. Newbury Park February 26: Bob Martin The Future of Roses March 26: Kitty Belendez Kaleidoscope of Fabulous Floribundas Committee Chairs Local Membership: Connie Estes District & National Membership: Janet Sklar Newsletter Editor: Roz Thébaud Roses in Review: Earl Holst Publicity Chair: Janet Sklar Opportunity Tickets: Jane Delahanty & Cindy Mastro Stagecoach Inn Rose Garden: Kathy Ayers & Sue Rosecrans Librarian: Position Vacant Little Rose Celebrations: Sue Diller & Bud Jones Consulting Rosarians: Dawn-Marie Johnson Hospitality: Irene Pashiledes & Barbara Morse Audit Chair: Bud Jones Program Chairs: Elda Bielanski & Karen Fitzpatrick Garden Tours: Position Vacant Sunshine Chair: Nell August July 18: Suzanne Horn LA Arboretum Consulting Rosarian School Let There Be “PEACE” Did you know that the year 2015 will be the 70th Anniversary of the Peace rose all over the world? Francis Meilland, a French rosarian, developed the canary yellow hybrid tea rose tinged with pink. But all of this was occurring on the eve of war in Europe. Growers were really taken with the huge blossoms and orders were placed to send plants to Germany, Italy and the United States. But nothing could be send overseas and France ordered nurseries to grow crop food. Meilland ended up shoveling out over 200,000 roses to make room for crops and he kept only a tiny area for his hybrids. While under Nazi occupation, Meilland managed to sneak some bud eyes to the American consul in Lyon. The consul caught the last plane out of Lyon in 1940. Those bud eyes made it to Robert Pyle of Conard-Pyle in Pennsylvania. In 1944 Meilland learned that indeed the bud eyes had made it to America. Pyle had the idea to dedicate the rose to “Peace”. It was introduced to the public on April 29, 1945 at the Pacific Rose Society exhibition. For you historians, this was during the Allied siege of Berlin. “Peace is not distant seek, merely goal but a which we arrive a th at we means by at that goal.” Martin Luther King, Jr. When the United Nations met for the first time later on that year, each delegate was given a “Peace” rose. That symbolic gesture propelled the Peace rose into one of the most popular garden roses ever marketed in the world. For more info, see the January issue of ARS&You or refer to A Rose by Any Name, Brenner & Scanniello, ISBN 978-1-56512-518-6.