Showing posts with label rose programs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rose programs. Show all posts

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Presenting at Monticello

Last year, I received a request from the management at the Thomas Jefferson Center for Historic Plants, at Monticello's Tufton Farm in Charlottesville, Virginia, to be a speaker at their 2014 Wine and Roses open house, which is this Saturday, May 31.  It's a popular annual event ... one of the few times when the wonderful gardens at Tufton are open to the public.  



My presentation is about heirloom roses that are well-suited for Virginia gardens.  It is a program that I usually do with a Powerpoint full of photos ... this time, I will be using live material and plants from Monticello's nursery.

I am very excited and honored to be doing this.  The weather this weekend is predicted to be warm and wonderful, perfect for spending a day in the garden, teaching about roses.  

Won't you join us?

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Staying Organized and Hitting My Marks

As we bid good-bye to April, I am keenly aware that the month of May will be a blur.

On Friday, I head to the airport in the wee hours of the morning to leave on a four-day trip to Rosedango, a weekend full of rose activities near Dallas, Texas.  I have been looking forward to this for months!  This is when I finally get to meet Anne Belovich in person ... she is one of my rose idols, and I am so excited.  (When you have a few minutes, you can see Anne's beautiful, inspiring garden through the photos of Carolyn Parker, HERE.)  

On Saturday, May 10, at 10am, I will be at Strange's on West Broad Street in Richmond to give a program about how to choose and care for roses.  It is free and open to the public.  Perhaps some of you local folks would like to come hear what I have to say?

The next weekend, May 17 & 18, is the Lucketts Spring Market.  I am working on preparations for this in between other things.  For example, this morning I made two more pillows out of the fabric that I dyed with chalk paint.

The hutch that the pillows are sitting on is another item that's destined for Lucketts.


Having a booth at Lucketts is a huge undertaking, and the effort needed to prepare will completely take over my life for at least the entire week beforehand ... considering there will certainly be finishing touches to things, and a LOT of pricing and loading to be done.  I am fairly well organized, and I'm good about writing things onto my To Do list (which is a mile long at this point), so I feel confident that things won't get too crazy.

I am leaving the next week and Memorial Day weekend open.  That is generally the beginning of full-bloom season for the roses.  Bloom season will probably be late this year, I think, by at least a week, maybe two.  It will be nice to have an unplanned week (if it stays that way) to work in the garden and get ready for Open Garden visitors.  (watch this space and the Hartwood Roses FB page for dates, posted as soon as I have a better idea of when the garden will be blooming.)

The next weekend is one that I have looked forward to since fall.  May 31 is the day of the Wine and Roses Open House at Monticello's Tufton Farm in Charlottesville.  This year, I am the rose speaker ... presenting a program on easy-care roses for Virginia gardens.  The event is free, with no registration required.  Plan to come see Tufton's beautiful gardens and, perhaps, learn a thing or two about how to grow roses in your own garden.  There will also be roses available for sale.

In order to keep all of this straight, and keep my sanity, I am having to be a total slave to my calendar.  By staying organized and working on things a little at a time when I have the opportunity, I hope that nothing during the month becomes a hair-raising emergency.  Wish me luck!

Thursday, November 21, 2013

International Heritage Rose Foundation Conference

The Heritage Rose Foundation conference in Lakeland, Florida, last weekend was wonderful!!  I spent five days immersed in everything roses, and I met so many new people.

Travel day on Thursday started on a bad note (accidently showed up for my flight at the wrong airport).  JetBlue fixed everything, I phoned the rental car company and amended my reservation, and things went smoothly from then on.  The conference kicked off on Thursday evening with a reception at Florida Southern College, our host location.

This is the new rose garden, designed by Stephen Scanniello to coordinate with the Frank Lloyd Wright buildings on the campus of FSC.


Friday, our group boarded two tour busses and set off to see the rosy sights, accompanied by a steady drizzle.  Our first stop was Rose Petals Nursery, owned by my friend Cydney Wade (who was responsible for planning the whole bus tour.)  This was my first opportunity to see Cydney's place in person.  She and her husband worked SO hard to prepare to host our group ... the place was beautiful!

The sign that greeted us as we got off the bus.
 

A beautiful vignette in the potting/working area, with a note from Cydney's sweet husband.
 

I plan to absolutely steal this idea to display my own collection of antique watering cans.
 

A little bit of light rain can't stop true rosarians from enjoying a beautiful garden.
 
 
My magic umbrella must have lost its power.  I bought it two years ago, have taken it unopened on every trip since then, and it had never rained until this trip.
 

This is 'Emmie Gray' a China rose from Bermuda.
 

'Papa Gontier', Tea rose, with a windmill in the background.
 

Bottle tree!!!
 

Rusty rooster in a hanging basket, with 'Reve d'Or' in the background.
 

Hibiscus, with benches full of Rose Petals' roses for sale beyond.
 

Spanish Moss in the trees seems so exotic, to this Virginia girl.
 

Next stop was The Dudley Farm, a Florida state park.  It is one of the last vestiges of an intact working central Florida farm, donated to the state by the last Dudley to live there.  Unlike some historic sites that are recreations of a way of life, this one is the REAL DEAL, with the 1880s house, outbuildings, fences, livestock, gardens, and crops.  I wish we had had more time to explore here ... I will certainly return when I go back to visit Cydney in the next year or so.

The Dudley house is a short walk from the visitor's center, along a path that was once the main road to Gainesville.
 

More trees with Spanish Moss.
 

The Dudley House, with its swept garden, full of original roses and other plants.
 

The main hall.
 

A bedroom, with quilting frame hanging from the ceiling.
 

Another bedroom.
 

Parlor.
 

Notice the swept paths in the garden.
 

Tropical plants, and a few roses, in the garden on the side of the house.
 

I don't remember what this building was called.
 

Chimney, made of native stone.


Our final stop was the garden of Don and Jan Rogers.  It's a brand new garden, filled with their collection of modern and old garden roses.

All of the roses are still small, since the garden is new.
 

'Gruss an Aachen'
 

This is Cydney, looking radiant and exhausted, as the day concluded.


We got down to the business of the conference on Saturday, meeting in the Alumni Center at FSC.  After a quick continental breakfast, the morning's programs began.  We first heard from Dr. Nancy Morvillo, who gave us a lesson on DNA ... in a way that we non-scientific folks could all totally understand.  Next, two students at a NYC science high school reported on their own rose DNA experiments.

Because of the rain, lunch was set up on the Frank Lloyd Wright esplanades beside the new rose garden.  If you look carefully, you can see me on the far left.

photo by Malcolm Manners


My program about the roses at Hollywood Cemetery was the first one after lunch.  I was a tiny bit apprehensive about the maiden voyage of a program on such an important subject in front of this distinguished audience ... but I needn't have been at all concerned.  The program went super smoothly, and I spoke for only a little bit over my allotted one-hour time slot.  I was told by lots of people for the whole rest of the weekend that they enjoyed it and they are now a LOT more interested in cemeteries and their history.  (I don't get nervous at all about talking to a large audience like this, thank goodness ... it may sound strange, but I think it's FUN.)

Stephen Scanniello's introduction, with my title slide on the screen.
 

Getting started.  (Malcolm Manners photo)
 

I'm rollin' now!  (Malcolm Manners photo)


Programs concluded with a beautiful presentation by Peggy Cornett, Curator of Plants at Monticello, about Thomas Jefferson and his roses.

The members of the Bermuda Rose Society had a lovely display of shadow box arrangements ... a form that they are famous for.  I'm not much of a flower arranger, but these were so beautiful and unique that I may have to rework an old picture frame and give this a go.

 

 



Saturday night was all about the buffet banquet and auctions.  Rare rose books and other goodies were on the Silent Auction.  We were treated, as we are every year, to Stephen Scanniello's talents as an auctioneer for the Live Auction.  He works the room like a pro, bringing lots of laughter and even more $$$ for HRF.  I won a very rare China rose in the live auction, but there was a mix-up at the cashier ... someone else paid for it and took it.  The person wasn't there on Sunday for me to talk to them, and I doubt I will get my rose.

Sunday was more relaxed, with the general HRF meeting, a taste of the new Rosa Mundi (publication by HRF) given by Gregg Lowery, and an inspiring program by Mike Shoupe on considerations for rose breeding in the future.  I spent some time in the sunshine in the new FSC rose garden, snapping a few photos and absorbing the atmosphere.

That steel gazebo in the center of the garden is HUGE.
  

 
 

 
 

 

... and then it was over.  Memorable snapshots from the weekend were the time I spent visiting with the delightful people from Bermuda, or having dinner chatting and eating Thai food with Tom Carruth (rose breeder and Curator of the garden at The Huntington) and Etienne Bouret (a SUPERB garden photographer from France), or comparing notes with Stephen Hoy (writer of the wonderful "Singularly Beautiful Roses" newsletter), or reconnecting with the lovely ladies that I met last year in the conference in Sacramento, and so much more. The whole weekend was a who's who of so many rose people that I admire ... don't pinch me, because I don't want to wake up.   

This said, I am really glad to be home. I am motivated and energized to get to work on my own roses. I got a great idea for a new garden while I was at the Dudley Farm. Speaking of roses, I only came home with two new ones from the rose sale ('Bloomfield Abundance' and "Green Mount Cemetery Red") ... I still can't believe that I had that kind of restraint.  To all of the rose people that I met this weekend, it was a pleasure to get to know you in person!   Thank you for helping to make my trip such a memorable one.

Friday, November 8, 2013

The Home Stretch

If you are looking for me today, you can find me curled up on the couch with my laptop, under a down throw, with a couple of critters snuggled up with me ... as I work on the final details of the program that I am giving at the Heritage Rose Foundation conference in Lakeland, Florida next weekend.



Because of everything else that I have had to attend to for the past few weeks, I got what I think is a late start on the actual mechanical part of writing and organizing and putting photos and text into PowerPoint.  Fortunately, this thing has been writing itself in my head for months and this last part of the process is going really smoothly. 

I try to do flowers on Fridays ... so here is another slide from my program, with one of my favorite roses in Hollywood Cemetery.



Time for me to get back to work!

Happy Friday, Everyone!!

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Let's Talk Roses

Next weekend, The Potomac Rose Society and the Arlington Rose Foundation are hosting a talk by renown rose expert Stephen Scanniello ... yes, THE Stephen Scanniello!



I met Stephen years ago when he was speaker at the annual symposium at the Lynchburg City Cemetery.  He is a lovely person and a wonderful speaker, and I guarantee that everyone in his audience will be educated and entertained.

This is Stephen in Lynchburg, giving a demonstration on how to dig up and transplant suckers of 'Tuscany Superb'. 


If you're interested in attending, and need to know how to get to Merrifield Garden Center, click HERE for a map.

I'll see you there!
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