No, not the sad song about “The Troubles” in Ireland from
some decades back about the Protestant and Catholic conflicts. I *will not*
start in on religion today. I am feeling fairly cheerful. On to what I want to
share. Roses, the flowering kind.
I've loved them for at least 65 years. As a small child I did not notice flowers
much. We lived in Jerome, AZ where for the most part, everything was a mass of
rocks! It was a mining town perched high on steep red hills. In our small yard
there were a few trees that someone had nursed along to near house-high but
Sunshine Hill had few flowers. Then in late 1953 we moved down to the valley
and settled in Clarkdale where we rented two small houses, side by side.
The joint yards did boast a few flowers. There was a row of
iris growing along the fence between them, all the traditional purple with
fuzzy gold inside as I recall. Around the north-facing front steps there were
some small viney plants with purple flowers. I think they were called vincas.
And there was a rose bush against the screened back porch south wall on the
second house which was a storage/shop/office etc. It only bloomed in the spring
so since we moved in November I probably first saw those tiny flowers in the
spring of 1954, sometime around my eleventh birthday. I was at once enchanted.
I’m not sure now why they came to be precious to me but they
did. There were other more common and typical tea roses and floribunda in many
yards but ‘my’ rose was special. I now know it is a type called a rambler which
is midway between the regular shrub roses and the climbers. My research,
conducted the last year or two as I sought to find a similar plant, taught the
ramblers have buds and leaves in groups of seven, a unique trait.
This Clarkdale bush was clearly old, very heavy at the base
and growing up near the eves of the back porch, perhaps eight or nine feet off
the ground. It bloomed in profuse clusters of tiny thickly petaled roses, pale
pink that shaded into and then faded to white as they aged. They were elfin or
fairy flowers to me, so little, so dainty, so perfect with their thick
clustered petals that made them almost little pom-poms. For twelve years or so
that bush remained my special charge. I watered and trimmed and loved it.
In 1966, I left home to spend four years in Flagstaff as I
went to the university. The second two years I lived in an apartment in an old
house on Agassiz St. There was a similar bush in that yard, just to the left or
east of the entry foyer/porch. I noted it in passing often enough but it was
not ‘my’ rose. There were some others in the yard as well but I was too busy
for gardening as I got two degrees in four years.
Finally that time also came to an end. I went to work for
the Army at Fort Huachuca and lived in several briefly rented Sierra Vista homes in short duration and then moved to Bisbee, perhaps a fated or at least a
pivotal act on my part. A year later I married my new next door neighbor. Before we
left Bisbee, I had bought a couple of rose bushes-maybe at the super market
since Walmart was not there yet. I remember a dog that adopted us rather
trashed one in spring 1973 and I was upset.
Then very late in 1973, we moved to Colorado when I
transferred to the Air Force at Peterson AFB. We bought a home in Falcon, about
ten miles outside of Colorado Springs. It was then a very rural area where most
lots were five acre ranchettes. We had a big garden and I planted roses, a row
of six along the east-facing front of the house. They came from Jackson and
Perkins and did well enough. I winterized and covered them each winter since at
the edge of the prairie the cold and the blizzards could be wicked. Then things
happened and we found ourselves moving to California in the late summer of
1977. The first roses to really be mine were left behind.
I worked briefly at Beale AFB near Marysville and the next
year transferred down to McClellan on the north edge of Sacramento. Meanwhile
we bought a house on the south outskirts of Olivehurst, almost suburb of Marysville.
Again I planted roses, only two this time but the area had many. They grew well
and bloomed profusely, all season long as hybrid tea roses do. One was deep red
and the other a striking red and white. I loved them and often took a bud or
two to a couple of special friends with whom I worked.
I was not happy in California. The seasons were all
wrong—hot and dry all summer without my beloved desert thunderstorms—and then
soggy foggy dismal gray on the backside of the year. I was not really happy
with my work either and Jim and I both wanted to go “home” but I promised
Jennifer, my daughter, we’d stay until she finished high school. The last year I began to send out transfer
applications and in the late summer of 1983, six years after we arrived, we packed
up and trucked back to Arizona. Once more I had to leave my roses behind.
I worked briefly at Davis Monthan in Tucson and the next
spring got back to Fort Huachuca where I finished the rest of my civil service
career. There were no plantings in our rental in Tucson for we knew it would be
temporary. Finally we found and bought the rustic and unique little adobe house
in Whetstone which was to be our home for the next two decades. At last I could
indulge my floral ambitions. There were some spindly old fashioned red roses
already in place. I relocated most of them and worked until they thrived. Then
my real rose garden, helped out by a gift from a dear old lifelong friend, came
into reality at the north east corner of the house. I established it under a
big twisted mesquite tree that had apparently found a good source of water for
it had grown a good fifteen to twenty feet high.
Somehow the roses and the mesquite were compatible. The
added water and fertilizer made it thrive but the roses did well too. I’ve
always been a bit amazed that you can plant a disorder of varied colors of
roses close to each other but they never clash or seem not to look ‘right.’
That was the case. I even moved one of the original ones, clearly climbers, and
put it right at the base of the big mesquite. It twined up into the tree and
the red roses scattered through lacy spring green leaves were very striking!
I had iris too and planted some other bulb flowers like
daffodils and tulips. They would go well for a couple of years and then fade
out. I never was quite sure why but I kept trying. The iris did well enough and
became so thick I divided them and shared cuttings with some friends several
times. Along in the early 2000s, possibly the spring after Jim had passed in
November 2003, I found a rose at Walmart that reminded me of my old Clarkdale
rose. I planted it and now believe it was a Fairy Rose, very like the ones I
recently acquired, kin to my old friend but not quite the same. The Fairy is
pinker and perhaps not quite as many petals per flower but little and special.
Finally in 2008 I reached the point where it was time to
leave Whetstone after twenty five years. Again I had to leave the roses. They
were mostly getting old and not as hearty and lovely as they had been a decade
or so before but still in place and hanging on. That was hard. For the next
three years I was “homeless” until my brother and I left Colorado in the fall
of 2011 and I bought this little house in Alamogordo. We intended to stay here
the rest of our days but have come to see things we do not like or want to
accept so yet another move may happen in the coming year, back “home” to
Arizona a final time.
Again I will have to leave plants behind. The first spring I
planted four climbers around the covered patio/porch on the south facing back
of our house. They have done wonderfully well and bloom profusely in the spring
and sporadically through the hot time to give another burst of flowers in the
all. The colors are mixed—a pale ivory at the east corner, and then a rosy
pink, a red and white and a blaze orange-red around the opposite corner and the
west side. Meanwhile I also planted lilacs, probably my second favorite flower,
and this last spring some forsythias for I love that very early sunshine bright
display they provide.
Late this summer in one of those novelty-type seed catalogs,
I saw some tiny roses, like those which I had been looking for half of forever.
I ordered them and so as not to have to leave them behind, I planted them in
large pots. They have thrived thus far and all three have bloomed. They are
brighter pink than I had hoped but I now realize that is typical for the Fairy
Rose. In time I may track down one even closer to my old favorite, probably
having to order from England since they seem to favor the tiny ramblers more
than the US growers do.
For now, I have these and the others as long as I am here
and if I have my way, there will always be roses in my space. Like me they are thorny at times and also
like me they are generally tough and hardy, trying to bloom where they are
planted and send out whatever beauty and sweetness they can regardless of where
they find themselves. The flower for April-born is supposed to be the daisy but
this Taurus April girl is all about roses.
Close up-mesquite rose |
Whetstone rose garden |
Fairy rose-first bloom |
Hi Gaye, Thank you for sharing your fantastic blog and talking about Jackson & Perkins! We would love to send you a catalog of our beautiful roses to plant in your home, whether you stay in Colorado or go back to Arizona. If you'd like I can get a catalog out to you. Just let me know, Your Friends at Jackson & Perkins
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