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Suzanne Verrier,
of Portland, Maine, who created, owned and operated
Forevergreen Farm in North Yarmouth, Maine(1983-1993)
has written a book entitled ROSA GALLICA. Her previous
book ROSA RUGOSA has been very popular and the first
book to be devoted to a single class of old rose varieties.
She has written for various publications and is a lecturer
on old roses. She has spoken at both the New York Horticulture
Show and the annual New England Area A.R.S. regional
meeting.
Having been a rose nursery person, I've had the opportunity
to become acquainted with a goodly number of roses
and from various perspectives. Hundreds grew in my
display gardens, thousands reposed in cold storage
before being shipped out or potted up. And then these
roses were planted throughout this country and even
further, whereupon comments and critiques filtered
back to the nursery.
But I've also come to know all
these roses, and most intimately, as an impetuous
and enthusiastic gardener.
`A gardener of least resistance' - I call myself.
One won't find any caution, symmetrical schemes, neatly
pruned shrubs or even color themes in my gardens
but
rather roses and complementary flora doing pretty
much as they see fit without doting assistance from
this
gardener. Organic methods are de rigueur: no sprays
of any kind, only natural fertilizers, and no winter
protection, etc., etc. Obviously the roses I choose
to grow must be a hardy, healthy lot. Those that
are not - roses with weak constitutions - are unceremoniously
discarded. The tenets stand firm.
Not surprisingly
the Gallica rose and I found each other early on
in my gardening career, and we've been
contented gardening companions ever since. The Gallicas
always living up to my artistic and horticultural
expectations and exhibiting great tenacity and tolerance
- often
enough in sites where many other roses might succumb
or at best sulk.
Gallicas are older roses (their heyday
being the first half of the 19th century) their genetic
background
is relatively simple compared to the majority of
modern roses. And generally speaking the simpler a
rose, or
closer to the species, the more tolerant of diverse
or less than ideal conditions. The Gallicas abide
by this rule of thumb, tolerating fewer hours of sunlight,
windy sites, dry sites, dubious soils, frigid temperatures,
extreme fluctuations, neglect and a host of other
horticultural
horrors.
Still other considerations for growing the Gallicas
might be longevity, disease-free constitutions, exemplary
pest resistance, fine and relatively harmless prickles,
attractive foliage and manageable, compatible shrub
size, discreet vigor - to name but a portion of Gallica
attributes. One plus worth mentioning for gardeners
beleaguered with Japanese beetles is that the Gallicas
bloom has graced our gardens and retired before the
beetles commence their annual rose gluttony.
But if I were asked to reveal the honest to goodness,
dear to the heart reason I grow the Gallicas it would
be for the glorious profusion of intoxicatingly perfumed
blossoms in forms finely and aesthetically fashioned
of another era - deeply stained in intense hues, tinted
ethereal shades or dusted ephemeral colors of antique
silks. From deep reds brushed with ebony to complex
pinks, to mauves and lavenders and even greys, to the
most delicate translucent blush - the colors of the
Gallicas grace my garden, changing like chameleons
and always giving this gardener boundless pleasure
and reward. |