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Bill Grant and Kleine
Lettunich have been gardening friends for many years.
Their rose gardens were started about the same time.
If you grow enough roses, you may be the happy gardener
who is creating new ones no one else has. With the
birds and bees and even wind as helpers, the roses
may be producing
families that find your garden congenial.
That is what
happened to Kleine Lettunich in her hillside garden
in Corralitos, California. Twenty years ago, when
she first became fascinated with species and old
roses, she planted them much as most of us do, for
cut flowers
and ornaments. But over the years her purpose changed.
As a lover of animals (she has a large collection
of tortoises, dogs, cats, parrots, goats), she began
creating
a habitat for the native wild creatures. Now there
are skunk, raccoon, dove, hawk, squirrel, possum,
salamander, garden snakes as well as many kinds of
birds, including
resident hummers.
Working in animal rescue for several
years taught her that many of our native creatures
are at risk with
the urban sprawl. She has nursed back to health
any number of animals.
But what does all this have to do with roses and seedlings?
When I first saw what she was doing, I said, "Kleine,
when are you going to clean up that pile of brush?" There
were long piles of twigs, branches, cuttings from her
garden strewn along the edge of her property. Looking
much like funeral pyres. Her neighbors were less charitable
when they saw the mess.
In the fall and winter she started
planting species, climbers, ramblers and other roses
around the piles.
If we fast-forward to this year, you would see huge
mounds of greenery, flaunting their blooms. The roses
have completely covered the piles, and the ground
underneath is now the home of wild animals. Just last
week I saw
a chipmunk emerge from a new mound and sit atop the
rosy bower. Birds' nests are safe here as their enemies,
the worst are the scrub bluejays, are fooled by the
camouflage.
Now, as a result of planting so many kinds
of roses, and having the birds and bees aid in the
birth, Kleine
finds and increasing number of seedlings each year.
Some parentage is easy to identify. For instance,
her `Mutabilis' seedling has all the earmarks of
the parent except that `Mateo's Silk Butterflies'
(1992) never changes from its medium pink color.
One of her favorite roses, `Francis E. Lester',
that marvelous Rambler, is certainly one of the parents
of `Lyda Rose' (1994). Both of these shrubs are
named
after her son and daughter.
Most of her seedlings
are not in commerce. But John and Louise Clements
have been in her garden
several
times and marveled at these roses. So cuttings
were taken and now the nursery says the two roses mentioned
above are among the top sellers every year.
Mention
must be made of the hillside garden. When she first
attempted to tame the horrible soil, she
almost
gave up. There were grasses and native roses that
came up everywhere. Water ran off the property,
and the soil was like concrete. However, with patience
and mountains of mulch (my envy here is deep),
she
has transformed the soil. Today she can grow vegetables,
iris, a large collection of clematis, ornamental
grasses, salvias, Australian natives, and plants
grown from seed she has collected in the wild.
Robert
Florin has built a series of structures that dot
the hillside. On these she has trained climbers
and clematis. She has had problems with gophers,
but now she says there is enough in her garden
for everyone. I don't share this optimism about the
horrid
gophers.
The climate is very warm in spring, summer,
and autumn, and the winters can produce some frosts
and infrequently
such freezes that set records in California several
years ago. The hill is exposed to sunlight most of
the day. For new plants, water-drip systems have
been used and then abandoned when the plants are established.
One of the nicest aspects of the garden is the line
of shrub roses that reach their natural size and
are
not pruned. As Graham Thomas says, shrub roses should
be treated this way (if one has the room, which Kleine
does).
She rarely fertilizes, though the animals,
hers and nature's, help. In December the display
of hips is
magnificent. So many people do not realize that
some species roses offer not only blooms but hips and
wonderful autumn foliage.
The labels on most of
the roses are now gone, so it is a guessing game
to identify them. When Peter Beales
spent a day there recently, he noticed that she
had some that only he grows. That is true: until our
own heritage rose nurseries started, we had to
order
the rarer kinds from England. Beales, by the way,
is issuing a new book on gardens around the world
that he thinks important enough to record their
roses and the growers. Kleine's garden will be one
of them. |