ROSE NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

CUBA

THE GOLDEN ROSE CUSTOM

Monday evening local time the sanctuary of the Virgen de la Caridad de Cobre in Cuba received a gift: Pope Benedict XVI. honoured it with a golden rose, a custom going back to the middle ages, popes used to hold such a golden rose during a procession on fourth Sunday of lent, called Laetare. Pope Eugene III. called this rose a sign of Christ’s passion: the gold symbolizing the resurrection and the thorns the suffering.

These roses were conferred to dignitaries of the Church, and they carried a double meaning: the conferral served as both an honour and a reminder: do not forget the responsibilities that come with being a Christian. In that spirit the group of recipients widened, princes and kings received it as well as abbeys and sanctuaries. Today, only the latter are being honoured by this special grace. Benedict XVI. gave roses to Altötting and Mariazell, Fatima and Aparecida. To these he today added the sanctuary of the Virgen de la Caridad.
The rose is not the only remarkable gift that can be found there. Already pope John Paul II. had given a golden crown, with which he had crowned the mother of God national patron saint of Cuba. Ernest Hemingway’s Nobel-prize for literature can also be found there, after receiving it in 1954 he dedicated it to the Virgin. It was stolen, given back and now it is kept safe.

Among these famous dedications there are numerous others, for example a plaque a mother gave, asking the Virgen de la Caridad to keep her sons safe from the guerrillas. The names of her sons: Raúl and Fidel Castro. (Fr. Bernd Hagenkord, SJ reporting from Cuba)

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

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

ROSE NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

UK

NEW MEMORIAL ROSE

THE ONE AND ONLY

Memorial rose in memory of Ian Ebbs gets Kate Middleton’s seal of approval

A ROSE named in memory of a father who died in an accident at work has been given royal approval at the opening of a children’s hospice by the Duchess of Cambridge Kate Middleton.

The One and Only rose was named after Ian Ebbs, 43, of Old Station Yard, Morton, who was killed while working on a printing press at St Ives Printing company in Fengate, Peterborough, in 2008.

Following Ian’s death his widow Jackie and children Matthew, 19, and Zoe, 16, teamed up with gardening experts to name the rose in his memory.

A percentage of proceeds from every One and Only rose sold is given to Greenfingers, a charity that creates gardens for children’s hospices.

One of the gardens the charity has paid for is at The Treehouse hospice in Ipswich, which was formally opened by the Duchess of Cambridge Kate Middleton on Monday.

The Duchess recently became a patron of East Anglia Children’s Hospices, which runs the new hospice.

Jackie travelled to Ipswich on Monday for the opening of the hospice and garden. A total of £45,000 was raised towards the garden through sales of the One and Only rose.

Jackie said: “We have raised £45,000 towards the garden so far, in only the second year since the rose was launched.

“We have also had 25,000 roses just come into season. Hopefully that will get us well on our way to raising £100,000 which is the full cost of the garden.

“It’s a lovely garden, very peaceful, and it’s lovely to see it come to fruition.”

The rose was named after the song The One and Only by Chesney Hawkes, which was chosen by Zoe to be played at Ian’s funeral.

The red rose is grown by Robert Wharton, a commercial rose grower in Norfolk, and was bred by the French company Meilland in their Parfum de Provence programme.

Jackie added: “The naming of a rose in memory of Ian provided an opportunity for some good to come out of our family’s tragedy.

“The rose is a fitting tribute to Ian who was such a kind, generous-hearted man who was wonderful with children – just a big kid himself really.”

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

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

The new “One And Only” rose should be available in the autumn of 2012

ROSE NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

UK

YORK

 

The Souvenir d’Anne Frank Commemorative Rose

A VERY special rose has been used to commemorate an important date in York’s history.

Yesterday marked the anniversary of when almost 500 of York’s Jewish community perished in the pogrom of 1190 .

Beginning in late 1189, Catholics goaded and envenomed by the coming Crusades In the Holy Land, form roving mobs and rehearse their fanaticism by attacking and murdering Jews. In September 1189, 30 Jews are murdered to mark the coronation of King Richard I the Lionheart. That massacre would prove to be a mere warm-up act for the carnage of March 18 the following year, when Jews are killed by the hundreds in York but also at Lynn, at Stamford fair, and at Norwich. Dozens of Jews commit suicide to avoid being murdered.

The massacre was remembered with a rose-planting ceremony at Tower Gardens.

The Souvenir d’Anne Frank rose was sent to York by Kenji Yamamuro, from Japan. The rose has been grafted from a flower sent to Japan by Anne Frank’s father, Otto Frank, to a young Japanese girl, Michiko Otsuki, who was a reader of Anne’s Diary, in the 1970s. From that one rose, grafts were taken by Michiko’s uncle, Mr Yamamuro, and sent all over Japan, to be planted and nurtured by children, as a living reminder of Anne and her longing for a peaceful world.

         Children from Knavesmire Primary School attended yesterday’s ceremony, singing a song with words by Anne, and hanging poems they had written on to a cut out “Remembering Tree” created for the occasion.

The rose was sent as part of the Souvenir d’Anne Frank project, a new theatre and music work, which will be touring to York Theatre Royal later this month.

BERWICK

JUBILEE GARDEN GETS A NEW LOOK

Councillor Jennifer Waterhouse 

A £15,000 revamp of the Rose Gardens has been agreed by Berwick Town Council as part of its contribution towards the Queen’s diamond jubilee.

The gardens, part of Flagstaff Park which nestles beneath the town’s Elizabethan Walls, were created for the Queen’s coronation in 1952.

However the area has begun to look a little tired in recent years and Berwick Town Council was keen to see it given a makeover.

Councillor Jennifer Waterhouse, speaking at a meeting of the council’s environment and regeneration committee, said: “This is a project we have been talking about for such a long time that we now need to go ahead and get it done.”

Councillor John Robertson, chairman, added: “It sounds a lot of money but Flagstaff Park has historical significance given that it was created to celebrate the Queen’s coronation.”

A local designer has put together some initial suggestions of how it could be revamped.

These include two metal archways at the entrance to the Rose Gardens which would have roses growing over them.

It is also planned to replant the rose beds, tidy up the hedgerows and introduce other plants such as geraniums and lavender.

In the part of the garden where there is currently a circular footpath it is proposed to put a new path straight across the grassed area, lined by low-lying shrubs. A flagpole has been suggested as its centrepiece.

Town clerk Sue Finch said: “The Rose Gardens are very much part of Berwick’s history but they have been looking very tired so we are looking at a combination of replanting and general tidying up.

“All the planting would be low maintenance and Northumberland County Council has said it will meet the costs of the labour.”

It is also proposed to relocate the bench seating on Marygate to the Rose Garden.

Members agreed to meet the cost of the project from town council reserves.

It is hoped the work will be completed for the diamond jubilee anniversary celebrations on June 4 when a party will be held on The Parade, hopefully followed by a procession along the town walls to the beacon – situated just above the Rose Gardens.

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

http://www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

ROSE NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD


USA

ROSE INDUSTRY NOT LOOKING GOOD IN THE STATES

BELOVED 

For a century, devoted gardeners have appreciated the marvels of delicate and finicky hybrid roses and referred to them by name, like pets or family. The product of generations of breeding, the queen of flowers could act like a spoiled princess because its delicate blooms offered a special reward.

In recent years, though, time-strapped homeowners have traded their big teas for compact shrub roses — utilitarian soldiers in the landscape that could cover ground without fuss.

Our desire for the carefree — no-iron shirts, no-wax floors, and now low-maintenance yards — has brought the rose industry to a crossroads.

“At some point, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy,” said Charlie Anderson, president of Weeks Roses, the only major company still creating new varieties of full-size roses. “[Landscape] roses will be all you have; the beautiful, unique hybrid teas will be gone.”

The flagging economy has compounded the rose industry’s troubles.

Two years ago, rose giant Jackson & Perkins, which had annually shipped 10 million bushes nationwide, filed for bankruptcy protection. Many of the hybrid roses the company created — such as Diana, Catalina and Beloved — may soon disappear from the mass market as the supply of those bushes dries up.

“Roses are viewed as an extravagance, and they’re still trying to shed that stigma,” said Seth Taylor of Capital Nursery.

“People have a very specific thing in mind when they think of a rose — it’s full and lush and romantic. That’s your traditional rose, what people love,” Taylor said. “The single-petaled shrub roses are gaining a foothold with the public, but when my customers look at those flowers, they say, ‘That’s not a rose.'”

While gardeners may have visions of old-fashioned roses plucked from cottage gardens, their interest in growing them has waned, said Jolene Adams, incoming national president of the American Rose Society.

“Many homeowners have had some experience — usually in their mother’s or grandmother’s gardens — so they’ll try growing roses,” she said. “But without sufficient knowledge [on how to care for them], the roses languish and do not grow to their full, beautiful potential. And they’re not replaced if they die.”

Most of the nation’s rosebushes originate in California’s Central Valley. But unlike with wheat or tomatoes, it takes several years to produce a single crop of rosebushes.

Hybridizers typically will test 400,000 seedlings to find one or two new varieties. Once selected, a new hybrid will be developed for seven to 10 years before it’s released into the market. When ready for sale, field-grown bushes are 2 years old.

Winter is prime rose-planting time. But this month, local gardeners are finding limited selections at nurseries and home centers.

“I observed dramatically fewer roses in the nurseries this year,” said T.J. David, co-founder of the World Peace Rose Garden in Sacramento’s Capitol Park.

“The financial ills of the rose growers will cause a slowdown in the number of new varieties of roses that are available for sale,” he said. “Since growers make plans years in advance, it may take a year or two to see the full impact.”

The annual wholesale value of California’s rose crop dropped 55% to $27.20 million in 2010 from a high of $61.05 million in 2003, according to nursery industry expert Hoy Carman, a retired UC Davis professor.

“The whole nursery industry is down,” Carman said. “In 2008, sales just plummeted.”

Said Adams of the Rose Society: “Roses are not the first thing homeowners think of when they want to plant a garden. Competition with other choice plants is fierce…. The industry is going to have to change — and supply roses that the customers can use in the landscape.”

Most major rose growers have gone bankrupt or consolidated with other wholesale nurseries.

Weeks Roses, in Wasco near Bakersfield, survived its bankruptcy and is now owned by Indiana-based Gardens Alive Inc. On 1,000 leased acres, Weeks will harvest about 3 million bushes this year. During grafting and harvest season, it employs almost 400 people.

Jackson & Perkins, acquired by J&P Park Acquisitions Inc. of South Carolina, no longer develops and grows new roses. Before bankruptcy, the company farmed 5,000 acres in Wasco with 20,000 bushes per acre. Without buyers, many of those bushes were burned.

Once a breeder goes bankrupt, its roses usually disappear with it. Rose patents — good for 18 to 20 years — may be sold, but budwood and mother plants are lost. Many Jackson & Perkins roses are now on the endangered list.

“Some will be preserved,” Anderson said. “But a lot of varieties were lost; there was no budwood to collect [to create new hybrid bushes]. Most will just disappear into the ether.”

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

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

 

Who Said “Romance Was Dead”


A MILLION ROSES

Based on a romantic pop hit from Soviet times, a Kazakh man has ordered one million red roses for his wife on International Women’s Day that will be observed on Thursday.

The man had a spat with his wife and sought to make up to her, according to the Express-K.kz news website.

The order for one million Dutch-grown roses was placed with a florist in Kyzylorda city in Kazakhstan and is to be delivered on Thursday.

Local prices for roses on International Women’s Day ranged from 500 to 2,000 Tenge ($3 to $13) per flower, which means the one-million order could cost the caring husband between $3 million and $13 million.

The ‘Million Roses’ song was popularised by Soviet pop diva Alla Pugacheva in 1982.

The song, which tells a story of an artist trying to win a woman’s heart through the gift of flowers, sold over six million copies as a single.

English Translation.

Once upon the time there was a painter
He had a little house and canvas
But he loved an actress
who loved flowers
He then sold his home
Sold his paintings and his shelter
And with all the money he bought
a whole sea of flowers

A million of scarlet roses
From the window you can see
The one, who is seriously in love,
transforms his life into flowers for you

A million of scarlet roses
From the window you can see
The one, who is seriously in love,
transforms his life into flowers for you

In the morning, you stand at the window
Maybe you’ve gone crazy
As in a continuation of a dream
The plaza is full of flowers
Your soul grows cold
What rich man is making fun by here?
But under the window, almost breathless,
the poor painter stands

A million of scarlet roses
From the window you can see
The one, who is seriously in love,
transforms his life into flowers for you

A million of scarlet roses
From the window you can see
The one, who is seriously in love,
transforms his life into flowers for you

The encounter was short
At night, the train carried her away
But in her life remained
the mad song of roses k
The painter kept living alone
Many troubles he beared
But in his life remained
the whole plaza of flowers

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

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Rose news from Around the world

USA

HERSHEY ROSE GARDEN

Besides building a business, a town and a school for orphaned children, Milton S. Hershey’s support of local horticulture earned him his own rose.

Having a town named after you is cool enough, but having your own rose? Now that’s cool.

When asked to sponsor a national rosarium in Washington, D.C., Hershey instead decided to create a “nice garden of roses” in his hometown.

Working with horticulturist Harry Erdman, Hershey designed a 3½-acre rose garden that included a small pond and more than 12,000 rose bushes of 700 varieties. The Hershey Rose Garden opened to the public in 1937.

The following year, the American Rose Society honored Hershey’s support by naming a rose after him. In 1940, the M.S. Hershey Rose, a scarlet-crimson red (velvet-black red) was planted in Hershey Gardens.

Unfortunately, the number of M.S. Hershey Rose bushes dwindled over the years. But now officials and supporters have launched a campaign to bring the beautiful namesake rose back to its former glory.

Using cuttings from existing bushes, the rose is being bred by two nurseries. Several of the new bushes, developed with advanced methods to fight disease, will be planted this year. By next year, 75 of the rose bushes will bloom in the gardens.

The Hershey Gardens encompasses 23 acres of themed gardens, colorful seasonal displays, unusual trees, and a magnificent outdoor butterfly house that houses 300 butterflies.

As part of its 75th anniversary celebration, the garden is planning to create a M.S. Hershey Tribute Garden to showcase the revival of the special Hershey rose bush.

The new garden will feature a variety of trees and annuals. A special tribute to Hershey will feature a special circular seating area that will include 75 commemorative naming opportunities. A quote by Hershey also will feature prominently in the garden: “The more beautiful you can make the place look, the better life the people will have.”

The tribute garden will overlook the community that bears his name.

Hershey “dreamed of building a community where residents could enjoy a wonderful quality of life,” said anniversary co-chairwomen Trish Foulkrod and Ashie Santangelo.

“He valued horticultural beauty and made it a priority in his community. Attractive green lawns and manicured beds created a beautiful setting for his thriving town.

“Today, Mr. Hershey’s legacy of horticulture can still be found throughout our town.”

For more information on the 75 donor opportunities or the tribute garden, contact the Hershey Gardens membership office at 63 W. Chocolate Ave., Hershey or call 717-534-3492.

 

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

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk

Rose News From Around The World

UK

NEW MEMORIAL ROSE GARDEN FOR DOVER

A ROSE garden will grow as a permanent memorial to the 193 men, women and children who died when the ill-fated Herald of Free Enterprise capsized off Zeebrugge 25 years ago.

Dover mayor Ronnie Philpott and the Reverend David Ridley, the vicar of St Mary’s, turned the first spade of earth at the site at the rear of the Gateway flats last Friday. Twenty-five white rose bushes are expected to be planted at the plot in time for the memorial service at St Mary’s on Tuesday.

Mr Ridley said: “There has never really been anywhere outside in Dover as a place for people to come and remember except for Whitfield Woods.

“The seafront is close to the port and so it seemed the appropriate place for it to be. As this is the 25th anniversary it also seemed a suitable time to do something.”

Dover District Council donated the land and will plant the rose bushes while Dover Town Council will carry out the maintenance.

Mr Ridley added: “The roses should be in by March 6, in time for the service and, if not, then we will plant the first roses on that day.”

Cllr Philpott added: “This is very important for the people of Dover as a mark of respect for the 25th anniversary.

“It is somewhere people can come every day of the year to remember their loved ones and reflect on things in general.

“It has a nice view of the sea and it is lovely that there are benches so people can sit down.”

A remembrance service will be held at St Mary’s, which has the names of those who died listed on a tablet at the foot of a memorial window, at 2.30pm on Tuesday with the Bishop of Dover, the Right Reverend Trevor Willmott, preaching.

Stars made of card will be signed by all those who want to leave messages and those messages, which will then be transcribed into a book of remembrance.

After the service, at 4.30pm, there will be a reunion for seafarers and family members in the parish centre followed by a dedication at the rose garden, which is at the site of the former fountain at the east end of the seafront gardens.

Following this, survivors and families of those who lost their lives will cast flowers into the water from the Prince of Wales Pier.

The church will be open from 10am to 6pm for those who wish to offer a silent prayer.

Dover mayor Ronnie Philpott and Councillor Sue Jones will also attend a memorial service on Sunday, March 4 in Zeebrugge.

The City Council of Bruges is inviting all survivors and families of those who died to the service, which starts at 9.30am.

To find out more e-mail protocal@brugge.be

AUSTRALIA

NEW VENUE FOR ROSE SHOW

 

The Barossa Rose and Floral Show has found a new home at Barossa Chateau at Lyndoch.

Mary Frick, secretary of the Australian Rose Society and a member of the Barossa Rose and Floral Show made the announcement at a celebration on Tuesday night.

Barossa Chateau was celebrating the 10th anniversary of the Queen opening the Barossa Chateau Rose Garden.

Queen Elizabeth II opened the garden in the year of her Golden Jubilee, on February 28, 2002.

Trevor Lang, David Ruston, Igor Moiseff, Dean Stringer and Tamara Moiseff, who all attended the garden opening ten years ago, joined in the anniversary celebrations.

A crowd of 110 attended to event, many of those from the rose fraternity, who were delighted to hear the news the Barossa Rose and Floral Show would call Barossa Chateau and the Rose Garden home.

Chateau owners Mark and Mandy Creed told the crowd they were fortunate enough to have the opportunity to reconnect the gardens of Lyndoch Hill and Barossa Chateau.

Lyndoch Hill covers about 15 acres, and once combined with Barossa Chateau, the overall area is around 25 acres.

About 22 acres of that is dedicated to gardens, so it has been returned to its original and intended design.

The gardens host over 30,000 roses, and while about 535 varieties have been identified, more than 2000 varieties were originally planted, both modern and heritage

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

www.countrygardenroses.co.uk