Rose News From Around The World


INDIA

Rose Festival. 40th Year and still going strong.

Rose Festival, Chandigarh is held in the famous Rose Garden at Chandigarh. This is largest Rose Show in the country. This festival is celebrated in the Rose Garden every year in the end of the month of February or during the first few days of March. The festival is organized to encourage the people to enjoy the bloom of different type of roses here

As Chandigarh’s Rose Festival this week enters its 40th year, residents throng in large numbers.

The star attractions are the millions of roses themselves, but there is also a host of activities, including competitions and cultural shows, at the festival being held at Rose Garden in upscale Sector 16 here from Feb 24 to 26.

Children would be crowned “Rose Prince” and “Rose Princess” and there will be painting and flower contests. Commercial and food stalls will be set up in the adjoining Leisure Valley in Sector 10.

In recent years, the footfall at the festival has crossed over 300,000, officials here said.

The Rose Garden has nearly 40,000 rose plants of over 800 rose species from all over the world.

The garden was set up in 1967 and was essentially the brainchild of Chandigarh’s first chief commissioner and keen horticulturist M.S. Randhawa – a man credited for giving the city millions of trees and a number of gardens and green belts.

The authorities here claim the Rose Garden, spread over nearly 30 acres, is the largest in Asia. Along with the roses, the garden also hosts trees of medicinal value.

“The Rose Festival is an important event for Chandigarh. Though the city itself is young, different generations of families have been coming in the last four decades to be part of it,” former councillor Chander Mukhi Sharma said .

The Rose Garden has been divided into 10 sections. These sections are not only for roses but also for a children’s play area, scrubs, medicinal plants, a hillock and musical fountains.

Some of the roses at the garden have been named after international and other personalities – from Britain’s Queen Elizabeth and former US president John F. Kennedy to former prime minister Lal Bahadur Shastri and M.S. Randhawa.

Some of the unusual names given to the rose varieties are: Only You, Dulhan, King’s Ransom, Hippie Girl, Love Me Tender, Careless Love, Lover’s Meeting, Delhi Prince, Oklahoma, American Heritage, Louisiana, Canadian Centenary, City of Belfast, Wild Plum and Dorothy Peach.

“We have to take care of the roses so that they are in full bloom when the festival comes. This year the winters have been excessively cold,” said Subhash, a gardener.

For a few years the name of the festival was changed to Festival of Gardens by the local administration. However, for common people, it has always remained the Rose Festival.

Hundreds of people from Punjab, Haryana and Himachal Pradesh visit the city for the annual festival. They come here packed in buses, trucks and even tractor-trolleys. The festival also attracts people from other parts of the country and foreigners.

Chandigarh, which was planned and designed by French architect Le Corbusier and his team in the 1950s-60s as a symbol of a resurgent, independent India, has a total population of over one million.

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.
Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

 

Published in: on February 22, 2012 at 9:41 pm  Leave a Comment  
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ROSE NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

UK

TRENANCE ROSE GARDENS CORNWALL

TRENANCE Rose Garden in Newquay is to undergo a month-long facelift as part of the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee celebrations – at a cost of £62,000.

Cornwall Council’s neighbourhood services team will lead the overhaul, installing a new drainage system and steel gazebo at the site.

The team will also remove compacted and diseased soil, and rotten timber edges, before planting new roses.

Work is due to begin on Monday next week when the rose garden will be closed to the public.

Andy Cook, the council’s environment engineer, said: “The existing rose garden is now of an age where the raised beds are becoming dilapidated and mixed roses and other planting has reached the end of their most attractive life. This is compounded by the poor soil which has become compacted in some places and is also sodden due to the proximity of the Trenance stream.

“The existing plants have been assessed and we aim to retain as many as possible.

Any plants which are not required for the new planting scheme will be given to the Newquay in Bloom Partnership.”

Councillor Julian German, the council’s portfolio holder for historic environment, added: “The council is committed to the provision of quality public open spaces and being able to use monies from developer contributions to support this project has been invaluable.

“Trenance Gardens have, for a long time, been an important public space for Newquay. The enhancement of the rose garden along with Trenance Cottages means that this area will be a focus for the community for a long time to come.”

Councillor George Edwards, Cornwall councillor for Newquay Treloggan, said: “On behalf of the people of Newquay I would like thank our portfolio holder Julian German who met me on a site visit with senior officers.

“I was delighted when they informed me on the site visit that we had funding to spend on the gardens. I am sure that with this money we can put a splendid show on in the gardens for everyone to enjoy.”

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.
Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on February 3, 2012 at 9:33 am  Leave a Comment  
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MAKE YOUR ROSES LAST LONGER

Roses are one of the most common valentine’s day gift.

Preserving those rose stalks fresh for a long time is really difficult and all attempts to keep that special gift goes in vain after a day!
To keep the flower vase bright and lively with fresh rose stalks, here are few tips to maintain the rose flowers and make them last longer.

Tips to keep rose stalks fresh:

1. The flower vase should be clean from bacteria. Scrub and wash the vase with hot water and bleach to kill bacterias which reduces the freshness of the rose.

2. It is best to store rose flowers in a cold place. This maintains the flowers and lasts long. You can either store the rose flowers in refrigerator overnight or keep them in cold water.

3. Sprinkle a pinch of bleach in water before putting the stalks. This prevents the growth of bacteria.

4. You can also store the rose flowers in warm water for one day. This keeps the rose flowers fresh for a long time as cut roses easily absorb warm water.

5. Always remove leaves from the from the bottom of the rose stem. Leaves rot and can easily grow bacteria. So, remove all foliage from the bottom.

6. Cut the rose stalk from bottom to keep it hydrated and fresh. You can cut everyday to keep it fresh. Fresh cuts enhances the glow and makes the rose flowers look fresh and last longer.

7. Keep the flower vase in a cold place where there is less humidity and sunlight. This prevents the rose flowers from drying.

8. Change the water everyday to make the rose stalks last longer. Cut the stalk from the bottom regularly to keep the flowers fresh. You can cut at an angle of 45 degree angle to allow easy absorption of water.

Whether the rose flowers are cut from the garden or bought from the florist shop, you would like to spread its smell and aroma in the house for days! Follow these tips to keep the rose fresh and bright for long. Store your romantic valentine’s gift in a cool place and keep in the refrigerator at night if required.

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.
Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on January 30, 2012 at 8:14 am  Leave a Comment  
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ROSE NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

USA

ROSES ARE THE BEST MEDICINE

As Gail Saivar checked out at Trader Joe’s on Tuesday, the cashier asked how the day was going. “Great,” she shot back, “if you don’t count the guy who took a right turn from the left lane into my car when I was driving home — from my radiation treatment.” Saivar collected her groceries, walked to the parking lot and was backing out in her crippled car when there was a knock on the passenger window. It was cashier Paul Gobel, proffering a bouquet of roses. “We’ve all had days like that,” he said. “He turned mine around,” says Saivar.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on January 28, 2012 at 7:43 am  Leave a Comment  
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ROSE NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

CANADA

A DIFFERENT VIEW OF ST VALENTINES DAY

On a sunny plateau near the Colombian capital of Bogotá, millions and millions of roses grow.
By Valentine’s Day, they will have been harvested, rolled into bundles, boxed, X-rayed for hidden drug shipments and loaded onto cargo planes destined for Miami.
From there, they’re packed into refrigerated trucks and shipped to wholesalers and distributors all over North America, eventually arriving at the florists, grocery chains and corner delis of Canada.
In 2010, this country imported $23.5 million worth of roses from Colombia. In fact, almost a third of all cut flowers sold in Canada are imported from Colombia—our number one supplier—including $14.1 million worth of carnations and $9.6 million worth of chrysanthemums. Those numbers will likely grow.
Last August, the Canada-Colombia Free Trade Agreement went into effect, securing a market for Canadian wheat, pulses and newsprint while eliminating the tariffs on Colombian flowers: It was previously 10.5% on roses. The numbers have yet to be crunched, but by October, 2011—just two months after the agreement came into force—chrysanthemum and carnation imports had already surpassed 2010 levels. For local growers—who cultivate $1.4 billion worth of flowers annually, a large portion in Ontario’s Niagara region—the bloom fell off roses long ago.
Colombia’s equatorial climate, with warm days and cool nights, allows roses to grow year-round.
Moreover, labour costs in the country are so low and roses so durable (they can be shipped without water or soil and last for a week or more after harvesting) that a 4,000-kilometre journey isn’t a problem. Still, local producers worry that the agreement may threaten stronger Canadian categories: tulips, orchids and daisies, among others.

For the time being, at least, they’d love husbands to consider the romantic potential of a gerbera daisy.

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.
Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on January 27, 2012 at 8:49 am  Leave a Comment  
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ROSE NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

SAUDI ARABIA

TAIF ROSES

In Saudi Arabia, roses are synonymous with the city of Taif, which is internationally famous for agriculture and in particular the cultivation and production of roses, dating back to 100 years.

Stretched along the roads and streets of Taif are many vendors displaying cork boxes full of fragrant home grown roses, fruits and other fresh produce.

In addition, the city produces rose essence and rose water, and every year the municipality and the Saudi Commission for Tourism and Antiquities organizes a rose festival, which is visited by both local and international tourists.

Despite the difficult conditions, such as scarcity of water and labourers during the rose cultivation season, the number of rose plantations reached 750 during the last year festival. These are mostly located in the cooler Al-Hada, Al-Shafa, Al-Dahia, and Al-Ghadeerain areas. Together, they produce around 233 million roses and comprise 34 factories for the plantation of roses and production of 19,000 bottles of rose essence.

The planting of roses usually coincides with the end of the month of January and lasts up to 75 days. Planters start with digging groves in the plantation soil, in which carefully cut rose branches are planted, covered in rich fertilizer and manually watered in times of rain scarcity. They carefully plant the rose branches close to the earth and make sure they do not exceed 1.5 meters in height, which makes it necessary to trim them constantly. Keeping them low encourage the rose trees to produce as many roses as possible each morning. The flowers must be plucked before sunrise, when they are dewy and most fragrant. Every year, harvest time starts during the month of April and goes on until the end of May.

Rashid Al-Qurashi, owner of several rose plantations and rose products, asserts that there is no other rose like the Taif rose because of its strong delicious fragrance. Even the Syrian Juri rose, which is bigger and prettier, has not such a strong fragrant as the Taif rose.

Taif is also considered the favorite city to escape the hot summer days of Saudi Arabia. Situated atop the Sarawat Mountains, the visitors enjoy the cool weather and delicious fruits. They also make sure they don’t leave this cool, green and fragrant area without taking back home boxes of Taif roses, bottles of rose essence and rose water as mementos of a good and relaxing time spent in the pleasant parks of Al-Hada, Al-Shafa, Al-Ghadeer, and others.

Production of rose essence and rose water

As a first step, the roses are put into special pots. These are filled with water — the amount according to the quantity of roses used. Then, the pots are securely covered over a low burning fire. When the roses start to boil, the fragrant steam passes through a tube that is surrounded by cold water, so that the steam condenses and starts dripping into a special glass receptacle until a layer of rose oil appears on its surface. This is then carefully skimmed off the surface and quickly bottled. The process usually takes between ten to fourteen hours daily.

Unlike Oud oil, which develops a better fragrance and hence gets more expensive as it ages, rose essence should not be kept for a long time, as that affects the quality and devalues it, especially if exposed to light and heat. In order to prolong the life of rose essence, experts recommend removing the plastic stopper from its glass bottle, because with time the plastic interacts with the oil essence and ruins its purity.

Rose water is usually filled into large 20 liter glass bottles for a variety of uses, especially for the making of Arabic deserts, and can be added to drinking water.

There are two types of rose water: The ordinary kind that is sold in small glass bottles for SR10 in shops and supermarkets, and a more special type that is known as “Al-Aroosa” (the bride), which is distilled rose water resulting from the production of rose essence. This type is sold in small glass bottles that cost around SR30 and is the most preferred in the Gulf. People use it as a perfume at home and sprinkle it on guests, using traditional dainty rose water pewter sprinklers.

Women also use rose water as part of their beauty regime ever since its beneficial qualities where discovered, such as cleansing of the skin and tightening of the pores.

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.
Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on January 17, 2012 at 5:42 pm  Leave a Comment  
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ROSE NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

UK

EARLY ROSES IN JANUARY !!

Despite the cold snap curious gardening fans are flocking to see SUMMER blooms in January thanks to the mild winter.

A winter micro-climate “heat bubble” on the banks of River Dee has triggered roses into re-flowering to produce a blush of flowers.

Experts at the University of Liverpool say the phenomenon of roses in bloom alongside snowdrops is completely unprecedented at its Ness Botanic Gardens in Cheshire.

Ness on the Wirral is renowned for its mild “micro-climate” thanks to its position on the banks of the River Dee and in the lea of Snowdonia.

But experts at Ness say the phenomenon of early-flowering roses is being reported by gardeners all along the west coast.

Ness Gardens Head Gardener Paul Cook has been amazed at the early appearance of the spring flowers but is “astounded” at the sight of summer roses in January.

Paul said: “We’ve had an incredible amount of snowdrops already but the gardens are so full of unseasonal blooms – including roses. It is quite unprecedented.

“Camillas and daphnes are out early and the snowdrops are putting on a magnificent early display.

“It’s been mild through the autumn and so far this winter we have not had a frost.

“But roses are summer flowers that we don’t normally see in bloom until May or June

“The fact is that some varieties have never really stopped flowering in 2011, but have now as the days lengthen they are really come back to life and putting out new blooms.

“It’s amazing.”

Cheshire’s Gardens of Distinction, across the county, are holding snowdrop events and walks throughout January, February and March.

* Gardening guru Bob Flowerdew proclaimed 2011 “The Year of Two Springs”.

Last autumn an unprecedented second crop of flowers and shrubs, like rhododendrons and ornamental quince, blossomed in many of the country’s gardens.

Even “spring bedding” perenials like ariculas and primula denticulata were reported to have put on a second bloom in the autumn.

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.
Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on January 15, 2012 at 5:34 pm  Leave a Comment  
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ROSE NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

INDIA

Delhi

ROSES IN WINTER  !

Queen Elizabeth 

Ever wondered that Mother Teresa, Christian Dior, Queen Elizabeth, and Jawaharlal Nehru all have one thing in common?

They have a type of rose named after them.

A winter rose show has been organized at the National Rose Garden this weekend where all such roses, along with about 50 other varieties, will be on display. The show is being organized by the Rose Society of India.

Institutes across the country have sent in roses of different colours and sizes for the competition, which has about 22 categories. – that are on display. within a big, white tent. There are roses so massive that it would be hard to fit them in both palms, and then there are the tiny ones barely an inch wide. Even the colours on display are spectacular – white with pink edges, orange and pink-shaded roses, white with speckles of yellow and pink, and beautiful coral roses, among others.

Forget the standard colours – red, pink, yellow and white – that are normally seen at flower shops, there is a multitude of different shades in single-colour roses as well – apricot, lavender, scarlet, deep pink, golden and orange. The competition also includes products made with roses, like incense, gulkand, candles, scent, candy and water.

Flower arrangements from the President’s garden at Rashtrapati Bhavan, and ikebana from the Ohara School of Ikebana are also on display.

The show might just be a weekend affair, but the rose garden has about 70 different types of roses – some in full bloom, while others still in nascent stages. “The bloom has been affected as the temperatures remained high for so long but suddenly dropped from last week. While some roses bloomed suddenly with the drop in mercury, others didn’t,” said Dhan Singh, general secretary of The Rose Society of India.

Despite so many varieties of roses, it seems strange that there are only two or three available for retail. But Singh says that few nurseries, at least in Delhi, are breeding different kinds of roses now. “With climate change and pollution, roses don’t grow very well here and nurseries cannot make much money from what grows. The cut flowers that come here are mainly grown in temperature-controlled glasshouses in Pune and Bangalore,” he says.#

 Details of all our roses are available on our web site.
Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on December 18, 2011 at 8:51 am  Leave a Comment  
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Rose News From Around The World


NEW ZEALAND


Awards for Best Roses at Trial Gardens

This weekend national and international rose growers and hybridisers will converge on the New Zealand International Rose Trial Grounds at the Esplanade Gardens to celebrate the best roses in the world

The awards will be presented on Sunday 4 December at 2.00pm by Palmerston North Deputy Mayor Jim Jefferies and John Ford, Chairman of the Trial Ground Committee.

There will be four different categories of awards, including the June Hocking Fragrance Award and the Nola Simpson Novelty Award. Any winning rose bred by a New Zealand amateur breeder is also eligible for the Silver Star of the City of Palmerston North, but the highlight of the weekend will be the presentation of The Gold Star of the South Pacific Award for the top rose.

Over the past two years 50 roses have been submitted by rose breeders from around the world. All have been cared for by Palmerston North City Council staff at the trial grounds.

“While many people visit and admire the rose gardens in the Esplanade every year, not everyone appreciates the national significance of the gardens as trial grounds,” Palmerston North Mayor Jono Naylor said.“PNCC is very proud of the dedication staff have shown at maintaining the trial grounds at international level.”

Most of the roses in the trial grounds have never been seen before in New Zealand and represent the latest trends in the rose industry.

“Rose breeders worldwide are breeding roses with more flowers and improved disease tolerance,” John Ford said. “More varieties have fragrant blooms than ever before.”

“The awards reflect the reputation of the City and the Victoria Esplanade Gardens as an internationally recognised rose growing area, particularly as the city gears up to host the World Federation of Rose Societies Regional Convention in 2013,”Mr Ford said.

The roses are all evaluated by a panel of 20 judges on characteristics including colour, fragrance, health, flower form and novelty over a two year period. The presentations will take place at the gazebo in the Dugald Mackenzie Rose Gardens.

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.
Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Published in: on November 30, 2011 at 8:02 am  Leave a Comment  
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Rose News From Around The World

San Jose
USA 

The San Jose Municipal Rose Garden.
 Six years ago, the weeds were higher than the flowers and the garden was on
“rose probation.”
Legions of volunteers helped restore it.

Years of budget cuts and municipal neglect had taken their toll on the San Jose Municipal Rose Garden, the horticultural heart of the Silicon Valley, where generations had graduated from high school, exchanged wedding vows or simply found a little bit of sweet-smelling solitude.

That was 2007 and weeds had grown as high as the tree roses. Herbicide used to whack them back had instead decimated the flowers, the Double Delights and Queen Elizabeth’s.    Beds first planted during the Great Depression were cracked and dry.

Do something, said the rose police (aka the Public Garden Committee of a group called All-America Rose Selections) or pay the price. To any rosarian worth his pruning shears, the threat could not be ignored.

So Terry Reilly, an electron microscopist who retired at 38, and then-neighbour Beverly Rose Hopper (her real name) sprang into action. Reilly viewed the garden’s rescue as nothing short of a political campaign, his role akin to a Karl Rove of the botanical set.

Guerrilla marketing, robo-calls, a volunteer, Reilly figured, could save a garden dedicated to America’s national flower, a bloom that’s “there in times of sorrow. It’s there in times of joy…. People get tattoos of roses. They don’t get tattoos of petunias.”

Reilly holsters his rose clippers, whips out his iPad and slides his finger across the shiny screen, showing picture after picture of a regional treasure mired in deep decline.

There’s the Peace rose, smuggled in from occupied France during World War II, its branches brown and bare. Dream Come True is a stunted little nightmare. Dried weeds billow over the 5 1/2-acre park like gray cotton candy.

Battered by the dot-com bust and the Great Recession, San Jose has slashed its budget every year for the last decade, eliminating 2,054 positions and cutting $680 million in all. There is no relief in sight.

The rose garden was an early victim of the meltdown, in such disrepair by 2007 — when only 20% of the bushes had been pruned — that its neighbours complained to their new city councilman, Pierluigi Oliverio. In his first month in office, Oliverio held a news conference in the dishevelled park, calling on the city to outsource its maintenance as a money-saving test.

Neighbours cheered, unions griped and the City Council gave the proposal a thumbs-down. So Reilly and Hopper stepped in, forming Friends of the San Jose Rose Garden and adopting the park. With Oliverio’s help, they persuaded the city to allow volunteers to take on duties it had largely abandoned.

Reilly also contacted All-America Rose Selections, a non profit group of rose growers that accredits public rose gardens throughout the country. The organization sends judges to evaluate more than 130 gardens, 17 of them in California.

Reilly wanted the evaluations as ammunition in the fight to save the garden. He was stunned when he called.

“They said, ‘Well, geez, you guys have been on probation for like three years,’ ” Reilly recounted as he strolled the garden paths. “I said, ‘Are you kidding me? Send me those letters.’ What had happened was those were being sent to the gardener on duty, and she was basically putting it in her pocket, not letting anyone know.”

Those letters, he said, were “the smoking gun.”

::
And so, the campaign began in earnest that September.

“Free the Roses!” was the rallying cry. Reilly and Hopper leafleted their neighbourhood, beseeching supporters to weed and deadhead in an effort to spring the blossoms from probation.

More than 150 people showed up, and 250 came to the January 2008 pruning, the majority promising to help on a regular basis. Reilly built a website with a PayPal function so people could donate money and indicate an interest in volunteering.

He shot video of the industrious volunteers and posted it on YouTube, along with a primer on pruning that stars Hopper and has had more than 90,000 hits to date. He built a database of volunteers, plotted their addresses on Google maps and realized that the neighbourhood problem was generating a far-flung solution; volunteers were travelling for hours to help “send the roses to rehab.”

By spring of 2008, Reilly and Hopper were calling the army of unpaid gardeners the Master Volunteers. The corps was trained, decked out in bright green vests and deputized to garden whenever the fancy struck them.

“My favourite time is in the evening, after a glass or four of wine,” said Reilly. “You come on over after dinner … deadhead roses and bask in the beauty.”

Right before Christmas 2008, the rose garden was sprung from probation. “I have never seen involvement like this,” then-rose society President Tom Carruth said at the time.

The rose growers were so impressed — and so worried about the health of other public rose gardens — that they wrote up the San Jose example as a national case study.

“The parks are considered extraneous expenses in times of economic stress,” Carruth said recently. “Almost every public garden in the United States is undergoing that very same pressure.”

But as the case study pointed out, in San Jose “a dramatic turnaround was achieved and the garden was restored to its former glory.” The moral of the story? If San Jose could do it, so can you. Already, gardens in Oakland and New Britain, Conn., have taken up the San Jose playbook.

By May 2009, less than a year after getting off probation, the San Jose Municipal Rose Garden was chosen as a rose society test plot, one of 10 in the country where roses of the future are planted, inspected and judged before they go on the market.

Eight months later, Reilly and Hopper enticed 935 volunteers out on a bone-chilling January morning for the resurrected garden’s winter pruning. The gardeners whacked the 3,500 or so bushes back in about an hour and a half. They called it “pruning at 33 RPM,” which in this case meant “roses per minute.”

But the biggest challenge to Reilly’s organizing skills came in 2010, when the rose society announced its first competition for America’s best rose garden. Garden supporters would vote electronically from April to July and judges would visit the finalists.

Reilly set up Wi-Fi in the garden, staffed a booth with volunteers and laptops, and wandered the paths, shoving his iPad at anyone willing to vote on the spot. He printed 5,000 sandwich wrappers urging diners to vote for the garden and gave them to a local lunch spot.

The once-ratty rose garden got more than double the votes of its closest competitor and was named America’s Best Rose Garden a year ago. The rose society isn’t planning another competition soon, but if it does, Carruth joked, “we’ll have to disqualify San Jose, because their volunteer force knows how to vote like mad.”

::

The garden turned Reilly into a campaigner and Hopper into an advocate for an essential human need — “a place,” she said, “that is free and open to all to refresh their spirit and renew their soul.”

And what about those volunteers, the 3,700 or so rose lovers who have collectively logged more than 31,200 hours, work that acting Parks Director Julie Edmonds-Mares said has “transformed” the garden?

Late in the afternoon on a Thursday in autumn, Myles Tobin, who has logged 1,960 hours in the garden, is training the newest recruit. Harry Garcia, with 1,850 hours, saws deadwood from a vast stand of Artistry, a coral hybrid tea rose. A trickle of blood dries on his sharp cheekbone, souvenir of an errant thorn.

Girija Satyanarayan has travelled nearly two hours from her home in Milpitas, switching buses in downtown San Jose. She likes to make it her routine four or five times each week.

The roses, she said, “adopted me to take care of them.”

“In the mornings,” she said, “when the sun just falls on these aromatic ones, the first whiff of scent is heady. It is just beautiful.    I come to catch that.”

Details of all our roses are available on our web site.
Over 1000 varieties to choose from.

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

 

 

Published in: on November 26, 2011 at 10:54 am  Leave a Comment  
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