Showing posts with label Heather Haley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heather Haley. Show all posts

Monday, February 28, 2022

A Growing Iris Resource on YouTube: Part III

by Heather Haley

In this post, I'll continue sharing the story of a growing iris resource on YouTube. The American Iris Society (AIS) uses its YouTube Channel to help organize and disseminate knowledge of the genus Iris, while fostering its preservation, enjoyment, and continued development. Many of the videos available are from the AIS Webinar Series, and their upload was planned for the benefit of all persons interested in irises. 

I am very thankful for the AIS Webinar Series, mostly because it has helped me become more involved in this organization. You see, I absolutely love irises and my heart sings whenever I see one. It doesn't matter if the iris is real, digital, or simply decorating an object. This also happens to other members of my family; our love for irises is practically a genetic trait. The only thing I like more than puttering around irises in a garden is spending time with people whose hearts also sing when they see irises. During 2020, few were able to do this in person because coronavirus disrupted many AIS activities for local affiliates, its regions, and the organization as a whole. By July, I was lonely watching iris blooms fade in my garden. 

Within days, a most intriguing message appeared in my inbox: the AIS was launching a webinar series! Immediately, my heart was singing a familiar song. For the remainder of 2020, my family and I gathered around an iPad on the kitchen table to enjoy presentations described in Part I of this blog postSome we caught live, but we also happily watched webinars we had missed as they became available on YouTube. 

In 2021, the second year of the coronavirus pandemic, AIS faced another year of uncertainty. With a second national convention in peril, all AIS sections and cooperating societies were invited to give presentations in the webinar series. Most of them accepted, and Part II of this blog post described some of them.

Also in 2021, I received a second intriguing message. This one arrived via text message. It read, "We need help at AIS, and I thought of you." I stood in my driveway a little dumbfounded. Up to this point, I hadn't done much for AIS at the national level, and I questioned what on earth made this person think of me. Sure, I helped my mother with a convention booklet a few years back. I volunteered to compose blog posts about irises. I am also (youthfully?) enthusiastic about all things related to irises. Whatever it was, the organization I credit for my family's love of irises needed help. I was willing and eager to assist.

 I learned that the small crew of AIS webinar hosts - Andi Rivarola, Gary White, and Claire Schneider  - were looking for help admitting participants in Zoom and greeting them. I was already familiar with the "pre-game" commentary that hosts engage in 30-minutes prior to each webinar, which always seemed like loads of fun. Before I knew it, I was signing in early to help the webinars run smoothly. It feels great to support the work of AIS, and help hearts sing for irises worldwide.

The following describes the remaining webinars that AIS volunteers prepared, delivered, recorded, and posted to our YouTube Channel during 2021.


Webinar #15 - “Spuria Irises for Every Garden; a Little History, a Lot of Beauty” with Anna Cadd

Anna Cadd was born and raised in Olesnica, Poland and is the current vice president of the Spuria Iris Society. Although she once aspired to become a medical doctor; her inability to kill rats, frogs and rabbits changed her mind. Her interests turned to botany and led to a Masters degree in Biology and a Doctorate in Plant Ecology. In this webinar Anna shares her enthusiasm for spuria irises with a little history and a lot of beauty. 


Convention co-chairmen Howie Dash and Scarlett Ayres previewed the gardens for the 2022 AIS National Convention. They shared a walkthrough of each garden in bloom and interviews with the garden owners. If you are interested in this convention or others, visit the AIS website for more information and hyperlinks.


Debbie Strauss lives in Midland, Texas with her husband Dale and is a member of iris societies in Midland, Odessa, Las Cruces, Santa Fe, Dallas, and Hico. Her mother and grandmother grew irises and set the stage for her love of everything iris! Debbie has been an AIS Garden Judge since 1990, and was awarded status as an Emeritus Judge by the AIS Board of Directors in 2020. Debbie shared her expertise on the pint-sized bearded irises referred to collectively as "medians."


Tom Waters began growing and hybridizing irises in the 1970s. He has served as yearbook editor and president of the Aril Society International, and is currently president of the Dwarf Iris Society. He works as a radiation protection manager at Los Alamos National Laboratory and lives in northern New Mexico with his wife Karen. In this presentation, Tom outlined the origin of the modern miniature dwarfs and discussed differences in flower characteristics and cultural requirements that result from different breeding backgrounds. 


Bob Sussman is president of the Society for Pacific Coast Native Irises and began the Matilija Nursery in 1992. The nursery sells California native plants and has emphasized Pacific Coast irises for the last ten years. Bob's hybridizing efforts focus on developing irises that are well adapted to the warm climate in Southern California. 


Wendy Scott is the president of the Historic Iris Preservation Society (HIPS) and shared information  about different preservation programs that help preserve the legacy of iris hybridizers. In this webinar, you can learn more about the HIPS Guardian Gardens program, iris rescues, Breeder Collections, Display Gardens, posterity planning, and the purple-based foliage project. 


In my opinion, the only thing better than an iris in bloom is connecting with people who love them just as much as I do.  If you have not done so already, consider joining the American Iris Society, one of its specialized sections and cooperating societies, or a local AIS affiliate. You will receive great information from iris growing experts, invitations to programs like these, and opportunities to share the beauty and thrill of the genus Iris


For Comments: 
What iris groups do you participate in?

Monday, December 20, 2021

A Growing Iris Resource on YouTube: Part II

 By Heather Haley

In this post, I'll continue sharing the story of a growing iris resource on YouTube. The American Iris Society (AIS) uses its YouTube Channel to help organize and disseminate knowledge of the genus Iris, while fostering its preservation, enjoyment and continued development. Many of the videos available are from the AIS Webinar Series, and their upload was planned for the benefit of all persons interested in irises. 

Prior to the onset of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, AIS had organized some virtual meetings, but it had not conducted online training classes. Uncertainty and the need to keep everyone separated disrupted many AIS activities for local affiliates, its regions, and the organization as a whole. Some of the AIS officers met to discuss what could be done. It was decided that AIS could conduct virtual presentations to communicate and connect with its membership. With this decision, the AIS Webinar Series was born. 

Some of the officers present volunteered to prepare the first webinars in the series. A previous blog post described webinars by Gary White, Bonnie Nichols, and Jody Nolin during 2020. Some of these early webinars were also Judges Training sessions. Like many others stuck at home, I was thankful for opportunities to become more knowledgeable and involved in the AIS Judges Training Program during the pandemic. 

In 2021, the second year of the pandemic, AIS faced another year of uncertainty. With a second national convention in peril, all AIS sections and cooperating societies were invited to give presentations in the webinar series. Most of them accepted, and the webinar series continues to this day. 

The following describes some of the webinars that volunteers prepared, delivered, recorded and posted to the AIS YouTube Channel during 2021.


Professor Carol Wilson was introduced by Dr. Robert Hollingworth, chairman of the AIS Scientific Advisory Committee. Dr. Wilson received her Ph.D. in the Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, where she researched evolution of the Pacific Coast irises. Afterward she completed postdoctoral research on haustoria in African mistletoe in the family Loranthaceae, a project based at the Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew and the University of Utah, Salt Lake City. After serving in faculty positions at Portland State University and Claremont Graduate University, she returned to the University of California, Berkeley as a research scientist, where she continues her work on irises and mistletoe. 


Dr. Robert Hollingworth, chairman of the AIS Scientific Advisory Committee, returned to introduce Dr. Carol Wilson for her second webinar. For more information about Dr. Wilson's research, travel log, and phylogenetic trees, check out her website The Genus Iris.


Howie Dash is president of the Aril Society International and a member of the AIS Board of Directors. Howie originally grew arilbred irises in the Hudson Valley of New York and moved to Las Cruces, New Mexico 11 years ago where he compiled an extensive collection of aril and arilbed irises. He has hybridized tall bearded and arilbred irises since 2010. His first arilbred introduction, ‘Chihuahua Night,’ pictured on the left, was in 2019.


Bob is an Emeritus Professor from Michigan State University. He is the current President of the AIS Foundation; chairman of the AIS Scientific Advisory Committee; and current editor of The Siberian Iris, the Bulletin for the Society for Siberian Irises. Bob is also the hybridizer of the American Dykes Medal winner, 'Swans In Flight', a Siberian iris, and the first and only beardless iris (so far) to win the American Dykes Medal.


Bob Pries created the AIS Iris Encyclopedia in 2007 and has been its manager in the years since, continuously adding to its depth and importance. By education, Bob is a botanist. His interest in irises is wide ranging and encyclopedic. Bob has served on the AIS Board of Directors, and has served as president of the Species Iris Group of North America, the Dwarf Iris Society, and the Aril Society International, as well as heading up several AIS committees. This webinar focused on iris information and content that is available in the iris encyclopedia and in the online library. (The library contains a nice selection of videos showing iris gardens, hybridizing techniques, and cultural information you might be interested in too.)


Patrick is broadly interested in plants native to Louisiana and the Gulf South with emphasis on Louisiana irises. He has grown and hybridized Louisiana irises since the late 1970s and has registered around 120 Louisiana iris hybrids with AIS. In 2018 his hybrid ‘Deja Voodoo’ won the Society’s Mary Swords DeBaillon Medal, the highest award given to a Louisiana iris cultivar. He is the past president and a charter member of the Greater New Orleans Iris Society. Patrick is also a past officer and board member of the Society for Louisiana Irises.


If you have not done so already, consider subscribing to the AIS YouTube Channel. You can show your support for this growing iris resource, and receive updates when AIS adds new videos for you to enjoy. 

Monday, November 22, 2021

A Growing Iris Resource on YouTube: Part I

by Heather Haley

In this post, I share a delightfully growing iris resource. Sharing information on the World of Irises blog is one of many ways that the American Iris Society (AIS) uses the internet to organize and disseminate knowledge. Content draws on the various talents of individuals within our organization and helps to advance its mission: fostering the preservation, enjoyment, and continued development of the genus Iris.

Volunteers with technical expertise (or a willingness to learn) devote time and energy to social media efforts that promote aspects of AIS to other members and the general gardening public. The AIS Facebook page was created in 2009, which was later supplemented by a Twitter feed in 2011, a YouTube channel in 2016, and an Instagram account in 2019. 

The AIS YouTube channel started with a video featuring World of Irises bloggers, and has added a sizable amount of content during 2020 and 2021. If you are just getting started with irises, have the desire to learn more, or need to keep yourself occupied between bloom seasons, I highly recommend watching videos in the AIS webinar series. 

The following describes the webinars prepared, delivered, recorded, and posted by AIS volunteers in 2020.

Gary White is a past president of AIS and started growing irises soon after he finished college. He earned bachelor's and master's degrees in biology, with a focus on botany. He has been a member of every AIS Section and Cooperating Society, and has been judging irises for over twenty years. In this first webinar, Gary helped us look at irises and circumstances prior to the formation of AIS in 1920, and then described some of the irises, people, and events leading to the middle of the 20th Century.




Gary returned for a second webinar to share irises and people who were most influential several years after the formation of AIS. His story picks up from the end of the first webinar, the middle of the 20th century, and continues through near the end of the century. This webinar focuses on irises that you may be growing in your garden and people you may recognize.




Bonnie Nichols is currently serving as the first-vice president of AIS, and was the first president of the Novelty Iris Society when this Section was added to the organization in 2015. She has also served AIS as a regional vice president, and treasurer. Bonnie has always been drawn to flowers with unusual characteristics and color patterns. In two webinars, Bonnie shares her passion for novelty irises and offers a glimpse into "something new from something old."




Bonnie Nichols returned for a third webinar to share wisdom from her experience growing irises for as long as she can remember. As in my family, Bonnie's mother was the source of her interest in irises. Bonnie and her husband Hooker own a commercial iris garden; and both are prestigious emeritus judges with AIS. In this webinar, Bonnie shares "Growing Irises 101," and focuses on basics for culture of bearded types.

Jody Nolin has worn many hats in our society, including AIS president, regional vice president, treasurer of the Society for Japanese Irises, secretary of SIGNA, and editor for SPCNI. She is currently serving as the AIS Affiliate chair and tries growing any iris that will tolerate the weather and soil at her home in rural northwest Ohio. Jody maintains an assortment beardless and species irises, including Louisiana, pseudata, Siberian, Japanese, spuria, AND bulbous irises. In this webinar, Jody shares the basics and delights of growing beardless irises.


Descriptions of AIS webinars recorded during 2021 will follow in future posts. Until then, visit the AIS website for links to related organizations, information, and ways to connect with others who love irises. You may also wish to join, follow, or subscribe to AIS webpages on your preferred social media platform.

Monday, September 13, 2021

Growing Irises Out East: When It’s Time To Dig In


by Heather Haley and Alleah Haley

Heather’s first iris dig as a homeowner. 


If you grow irises long enough, they will need some care and attention. Many resources suggest digging and dividing irises, but few thoroughly describe doing either. Heather frequently sees questions about this on the Iris Lovers Facebook group. Since our family has been digging and dividing recently, it seems like a worthy topic to write about. 


Why do we dig and divide irises?

Irises reproduce asexually by forming new baby plants (called increases) on the sides of an older rhizome. Informally, we refer to the older rhizome as the “mother” and the smaller offspring as “daughters.” The mother plant provides a food source for daughters while they remain attached to her. 


Left alone, irises will form “clumps,” and their exponential growth habit produces crowded conditions after several generations. A favorite example is ‘Peggy Sue’: a lovely reblooming iris that produces two healthy increases each year like clockwork. After one year, she had two daughter rhizomes. After two years, 4 granddaughter rhizomes appeared. After three years, there were 8 great-granddaughters. After four years, 16 great- great granddaughters formed a complete circle around their ancestors. It was impressively dense and nearly a foot and a half in diameter.


Can you spot the original mother rhizome?


If irises grow undisturbed for a long time, rhizomes begin to grow on top of one another. If clumps are REALLY crowded, you might even see a daughter forming ON THE TOP of its mother. 


A new rhizome forming on top of a clump.

Genetics and growing conditions determine how many healthy increases a mother rhizome will make, and how many of her daughters survive. For this reason, it’s hard to say exactly how often your irises need to be dug and divided. For the popular tall-bearded type, the recommendation is every three or four years. 


When do you we dig and divide irises?

At Heather’s farm in Ramseur, North Carolina we try to dig, divide, and replant irises from mid-June to mid-September. In the heat of the summer, most irises go through a window of dormancy. During this time, irises can be removed from soil without disturbing processes vital to their growth and reproduction. We time digging to occur at least six weeks after bloom because irises use that time to set structures needed to bloom in the future. We try to finish replanting at least six weeks before first frost because irises need to grow new roots before temperatures get too cold. 


However, North Carolina can be extremely hot and humid in the summertime. Several years back, Heather got heat rash (also known as prickly heat) during July when trying to get a new iris bed established and planted in full sun. She couldn’t garden for several weeks after that and swore never to do it again—no matter how crispy and dry her iris rhizomes look. 


Now older (and wiser?), Heather avoids working in iris beds when conditions are too hot and humid for sweat to evaporate. We tend to dig iris clumps in the morning, quickly toss then into containers, and put containers of irises in the shade to divide, trim, and label. Shade is provided by a pop-up tent, carport, covered porch …the last being a joy of growing irises "Out East." Ensure access to cold beverages and a nice breeze—supplied by a construction-type battery-operated fan if Mother Nature doesn’t supply it.


What could be better than leisurely processing irises the way past generations would shell peas?

How do you dig irises?
Digging and dividing irises is a lot like riding a bike. With enough practice, your body will intuitively know what to do. However, if you have never seen it done it can be quite confusing. 

Our friend Bonita Masteller digging a clump for our local iris club sale.

First we look close to the clump, and take a good look at it while trying to imagine where the roots are underground and how daughters are attached to their mothers. If irises were planted too close together, it can be hard to discern where one clump ends and another one begins. Using your fingers to pull soil away from the clump can help you see and feel connected rhizomes and plan accordingly. 


In California, Alleah preferred to use an ergonomic digging fork in her sandy soil and raised beds. Heather likes digging with the fork, but also uses a sharp rounded shovel to dig irises in her clay soil. The irises don’t seem to mind either one, so feel free to use whatever medium-to-long handled digging tool is in reach. 


Favorite tools for digging irises

Place the tool about 6 inches away from the clump and press it deep into the ground. Next, push the handle down firmly to lift the clump of irises up. Don’t worry if this separates mother and daughter rhizomes; it was probably going to happen anyway. Place the tool in a new location and repeat until rhizomes can be picked up easily. Pulling on rhizomes can damage their leaves or roots so we avoid using too much force. 


If plants and soil seem stuck together, dropping or throwing a clump root-side down onto the ground from waist-height is quite satisfying and effective. We dig one variety at a time and place its permanent tag upside down in a large plastic pot or similar container. Irises of that variety are placed in the pot, and gently stacked for further processing.


Avoid stabbing irises with your tools, stepping on them, or throwing soil where it doesn’t belong. Don’t ask how this happens… digging can be really tiring. If at all possible, train a young person to help you dig. They might get really excited about plants which can withstand being torn apart and thrown on the ground and want to grow their own. Both Alleah and Heather got interested in irises by helping to dig them. It works! You very well could inspire a youth to become a member of the American Iris Society


How do you divide irises?

This is Heather’s favorite part. Mother and daughter rhizomes look like ginger root and can be snapped apart in a similar fashion. Some people cut rhizomes apart, but we avoid this because a knife should be cleaned between cuts. If a rhizome is soft or really long, we may cut it with pruning shears or on a cutting board with a kitchen knife which is designated for permanent garden use.  


How do you replant irises?

Stay tuned for our next blog post… Growing Irises Out East: It’s Planting Time!


Getting irises ready for planting at Heather's farm


For comments: 

How do you dig your irises?


Monday, June 14, 2021

Growing Irises Out East: Meeting Up in Raleigh

 by Heather Grace and Alleah Barnes Haley


Alleah Haley and daughter Heather discussing irises at the 2021 Region 4 Spring Meeting.
Bee Happy Farm, Creedmoor, North Carolina


Last month Alleah, daughter Heather, and son-in-law Chris met up with about 40 other members of the American Iris Society (AIS) in Raleigh, North Carolina. In 2020 our local iris club, the Eastern North Carolina Iris Society, postponed hosting the AIS Region 4 Spring Meeting due to COVID, so we were eager to make it happen in 2021… if this could be done safely. Orchestrating this regional meeting required a BIG tour bus filled at half capacity for garden tours, BIG meeting rooms for social distancing, and collectively BIG hopes that our iris friends could and would attend.


Enjoying irises together AND apart
(foreground left to right) Bob Pries, garden co-owner Dean Richards, immediate past RVP Doug Chyz, and Anita Moran


When the time came, our hearts filled with joy. We met new members who joined AIS during the pandemic when we were unable to meet in person. Familiar faces appeared from our nearest North Carolina neighbor club, the Charlotte Iris Society. From Virginia we were joined by members from the Fredericksburg Area Iris Society, the Shenandoah and Potomac Iris Society, and the Central Virginia Iris Society. Coming from Maryland were members of the Francis Scott Key Iris Society. We even attracted out-of-region celebrities: Doug Chyz of South Carolina and AIS President Jody Nolan and her husband of Ohio.

Attending a regional meeting is always a delightful experience. In addition to connecting with other iris aficionados, the scenery is a feast for the eyes. On Thursday evening the talented Anita Moran presented a program on “How to Photograph Irises.” It was fairly technical and included advice on how to properly focus the camera on iris and avoid extraneous objects while photographing.  Alleah is now inspired to take a follow-up at the community college when in-person classes resume. She believes some skills are best learned in the classroom.

Anita Moran photographing irises


This meeting did not disappoint where learning was concerned. New member Matt Liner brought his first entries ever for an iris show, which joined those delicately transported from distant gardens. The over-100-specimen turnout was impressive considering that most entries were grown in other states. ENCIS members with gardens on tour kept their blooms at home for everyone to enjoy. Apprentice Judge Ingrid Bray received show bench judges’ training under accredited judges Anita Moran, Jody Nolan, and Sue Shackelford. Heather enjoyed punching entry tags to record judges’ awards and place ribbons as a clerk for the iris show. Clerking is a great opportunity to learn more about irises, and she got to spend quality time with expert facilitator Lois Rose who served as Show Chairman. 


Entering an iris show is a fun way to share blooms from your garden and learn other varieties you might like to grow.


In a banquet room nearby, Alleah moderated a panel discussion of AIS Region 4 judges Ray Jones, Ginny Spoon, and Carol Warner on ethics of judging irises. This topic is one Alleah is passionate about. She has always been particular about following guidelines and doing things right---this applies equally to all aspects of her life. A key message was that judges are the backbone of AIS because they personify its mission and goals. The panel discussion concluded with a 15-question test. No worries. It was “open-book, open notes” which relieved the audience’s anxiety. 


After lunch, it was time for more learning! Carol Warner gave training on AIS Awards and Honors. This topic is a requirement for Apprentice Judges to be eligible for accreditation, and many were pleased to add it to their lists of completed training. When the two-hour session concluded, Heather decided it was time for a nap. Alleah and Chris stayed strong and attended the regional plant auction. They bid on many wonderful irises, herbs, shrubs, and succulents donated by members of the region. Chris got outbid by Jody Nolan on a beautiful historic Iris japonica 'Aphrodite’ with variegated foliage. Jody gave a piece of her new specimen to Chris, and it will be a plant with a story our family will treasure for many years to come. Iris friends are really the best type of friends a gardener could ask for. They instinctively share GREAT PLANTS!


 

Chris’ rhizome of Iris japonica ‘Aphrodite’ will spend a few years increasing in a pot so he can keep an eye on it.


Saturday brought more opportunities to learn, albeit away from classroom walls. At the first host garden, participants had their pick of four in-garden judges’ training sessions; and the trio of attendees from our family - Alleah, Heather, and Chris - trotted like ducklings behind instructor Anita Moran to a distant bed of medians (small types of irises). This was Chris’ first regional and first opportunity to experience in-garden training. After clear, concise, expert instruction from Anita, Chris set about evaluating an iris. He seemed to enjoy the exercise, and it was fun to hear another family member critique and praise iris features.


Reblooming iris ‘Peggy Sue’ (Lauer 2006) does well in our gardens, and formed impressive clumps for Diana Dudley and Dean Richards. 


It is important to see an iris growing and to know what attributes make irises a prized garden perennial. To the novice, all irises are equally worthy candidates for the home garden. However, for the trained eye, critical merits and faults can be discerned. Some lack pleasing proportions, whereas others have flowers and leaves that match their height. Colors catch the eye from a distance and beards contribute pizzazz. The petals can be pinched (a fault) or have forms that twist (ditto). In the garden, it becomes obvious which irises have good substance and are able to withstand adverse weather conditions without losing their stuff.


Intermediate Bearded iris ‘Concertina’ (G. Sutton 2000) bloomed wonderfully for our family this year, and was doing the same for Mary and Don Myers. 


Clues about floriferousness are present from "bud count" (the number of spent blooms, open blooms, and buds that have not opened yet). Comparing foliage and plants can reveal which cultivars have a good green color, are disease resistant, and will avoid bloom out. It is impossible to gauge these attributes from a photograph. They must be evaluated in a garden, and it helps to understand what you are looking at.


Susan Miller invited attendees to offer suggestions that could help her identify a historic iris she received from her grandfather.  


When an iris does well in multiple gardens, it stands out in your memory.  Each visit is like seeing an old friend you have dearly missed. It was a joy to tour gardens of ENCIS members Diana Dudley and Dean Richards, Mary and Don Myers, Susan and Glenn Grigg, and Susan and Pete Miller. Each host welcomed the bus with enthusiasm, and shared quirks that make their gardens unique. Visitors took careful notes, and gardens will be described fully in a future issue of our regional newsletter, The Newscast.  


Host gardens identified irises introduced by a Region 4 hybridizer with white flags. ‘Cobra’s Eye’ (D. Spoon 2000) received the most votes on attendee ballots and received the regional D. C. Nearpass Award.


Bus captains Heather and Chris encouraged attendees to designate their favorite blooms on ballots, and regional award winners were announced during a banquet later in the evening. Guest speaker Jody Nolan shared short programs “Why You Should Grow Species Iris” and “How AIS Works.”  A key takeaway was that our directors wear many hats, and volunteers can apply their interests and skills to benefit everyone. This rallying cry inspired the technologically-inclined Heather to join AIS Social Media team. She wants to share the love of irises with gardeners who aren’t familiar with AIS yet, but might want to join and learn more.


Irises introduced by hybridizers outside Region 4 were also eligible for awards. ‘Wishful Thinking’ (Keppel 1996) received the most votes and won the regional B. Y. Morrison Award.

Alleah is already making plans to gather her descendants at the next national convention. Perhaps we should invite the iris-loving cousins too. We loved getting out of the house for a meetup in Raleigh, and can’t wait for the next opportunity to spend time with our iris family, new members, and old friends. 


Photo Credits:

Chris Broberg: Alleah Haley and Heather, Enjoying Irises, Anita Moran; 

Nadya Pysmenna: Entering an iris show

Heather Haley: ‘Aphrodite’, ‘Peggy Sue’, ‘Concertina’, Susan Miller historic, ‘Cobra’s Eye’, ‘Wishful Thinking’


For comments:

What do you enjoy doing with members of your region and local iris club? 



Monday, February 22, 2021

Growing Irises Out East: Labeling Our Treasured Things

By Heather Grace and Alleah Barnes Haley


Labeling Potted Irises in 2019


For members of our family, irises aren’t just plants. Irises are treasures intertwined in our family traditions, celebrations, and memories. Every time we see an iris, we are reminded of the people we dearly love and our hearts fill with joy. We honor the work that brought plants to our gardens by choosing proper and durable labels during cultivation and division.



Alleah and her daughters Heather, Susan, and Keren enjoying production fields at Schreiner's Iris Gardens in Salem, Oregon.


Alleah’s experience with irises has a parallel with her youngest daughter Heather’s experience with historic family photos. When Heather received a trunk filled with mementos from her paternal and maternal ancestors, she found the photographs both wonderful and problematic. Without informative and durable labels, our family photographs became mysterious treasures that were difficult to identify once passed along. With over 80,000 registered varieties and counting, the same can be said for irises.  Without informative and durable labels, irises become mysterious treasures that are difficult to identify once passed along. We share a powerful lesson inspired by our numerous and now unidentifiable family photographs: Labels help future generations understand and appreciate a treasure we pass along.



Although Alleah quickly recognized her mother, she could not identify the man on the left or the woman in the center. They could be iris society members or friends from service organizations in New Mexico.


Our trunk contained mementos of a mysterious irisarian Heather had heard about her entire life but never got to meet. Alleah was highly familiar with this person and dutifully started labeling photos from memory for Heather. For at least an hour Alleah told wonderful stories about the first bona fide iris lover in our family, Heather’s maternal grandmother Gertie May Barnes. Gertie’s passion for this particular plant is the reason her descendants instinctively “ooh and ah” and discuss them as if they were close relatives. Irises have been part of our lives for as long as we can remember.


Around 1944, Gertie and her husband Bernard Otto Barnes moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico. Gertie sought out a hardy perennial that could withstand growing in that climate. What Gertie found was an extraordinary “garden diva” that inspired her membership in the American Iris Society (AIS), training to become an accredited AIS judge, and service as Regional Vice President for AIS Region 23 (New Mexico).


Gertie and the Barnes family's 1952 Packard


By the 1960s, Gertie had used almost two-acres surrounding the Barnes home to establish Willow Garden Nursery where she maintained a large collection of irises and sold perennials by word-of-mouth. Gertie used profits from her nursery to purchase new irises and attend annual National Iris conventions and those of another service organization. Aril and arilbred irises grow very well in New Mexico and were Gertie’s favorites. She became fast friends with aril fancier and hybridizer Howard Shockey and his wife Irene. Gertie also collected each American Dykes Medal winner and the yearly top 100 honorees of the AIS popularity poll (the “100 Favorites”). 


Gertie also enjoyed fishing, and she passed unexpectedly while doing this on Williams Creek Lake near Pagosa Springs, Colorado in late 1967. The boat she was fishing in with Bernard overturned and she was unable to swim. Bernard nearly lost his own life trying to save hers. Although we know the late Mrs. Bernard Barnes successfully hybridized irises and exhibited seedlings, we don’t believe any were formally registered with AIS nor introduced into commerce. Family oral history is that she didn’t feel her own hybrids were worthy of registration or introduction. 



The trunk Heather received contained nine iris show certificates awarded to her grandmother Mrs. Bernard Otto Barnes. It appears that Gertie exhibited iris seedlings starting in 1963 until her passing in 1967. 


We keep Gertie’s memory alive by growing irises like she did. Irises in our collection were purchased and/or received from members of an informal and extended “iris family.” We feel kinship to anyone growing labeled irises. Their combined effort makes it possible for us to enjoy and collect the irises we know Gertie had. Especially close to our hearts are owners of a garden toured during the 2019 AIS National Convention: Rudy Ciuca and Joe Lawrence of the C&L Vineyard Garden in Sonoma, California. Rudy and Joe are close friends of Alleah’s and have always been quick to aid efforts to keep her collection of American Dykes Medal winners complete and up to date. Most recently, they started helping Heather collect recipients of other AIS awards and notable cultivars her heart desires. At least 20 boxes of irises from various members of our “iris family” arrived at Heather’s farm during 2020, plus boxes of iris labels inherited as Alleah was downsizing. Perhaps only an iris lover would get as excited as Heather did about this inheritance! Each year, creating labels for irises we receive is our way of honoring our extended “iris family” and the traditions, celebrations, and days we spent together “oohing and ahhing’’ over our treasured plants. The names and dates appearing on iris labels prompt discussion and storytelling much like family photos do. Remember, labels help future generations understand and appreciate a treasure we pass along. 


As Heather was growing up, iris labels cemented her understanding of irises as a family  treasure. Her mother Alleah spent many hours commuting to work and supporting the activities her three children participated in. Alleah had little time to spare, and it often focused on caring for the 16 labeled irises in her garden. From her earliest age, Heather knew what irises were and of her mother’s and grandmother's love for them. The simple fact they were labeled sparked Heather’s curiosity. She wondered, why on Earth would anyone bother making little metal tombstones for their irises? None of the neighbors’ plants had these. Sometimes botanical gardens did, but those labels had strange sounding Latin names on them. Now, nearly thirty years later, Heather understands why Alleah was labeling her irises. It’s because Gertie did, and our extended iris family does. It becomes possible to share information widely, replace a plant you loved, and organize contests when many iris lovers know the identities of each “diva” blooming in their garden.



AIS Bronze Medal Certificates 

Grandmother Gertie May Barnes 1966

Granddaughter Heather Grace Haley 2019


Our family practices a labeling tradition started by Gertie May: using galvanized metal plant tags from See-Fine Flower Marker Company. The Idaho company was established in 1953 and its high-quality product accommodates engraved or printed labels. The name plate measures 1 ¾” x 3 ⅜” with rounded corners, held at a 45 degree angle atop a single sturdy galvanized wire. A similar stainless steel product with two upright wires is sold by Kincaid Plant Markers of Missouri, but our family has always used  See-Fine Markers. They don't twist when pushed into the ground and we get nostalgic about the botanical garden type markers Gertie liked. We also know See-Fine markers will survive battles against riding lawn mowers while maintaining readability and perhaps structural integrity. Alleah prefers the 20-inch size for median irises and submits orders through the U. S. Postal Service. Heather prefers the 26-inch size and submits orders by e-mail. Owners and pricing have changed at See-Fine over the years, but we are delighted the company is still in business.

See-Fine Flower Markers

Thad Brinkley

1314 Alder Avenue

Lewiston, ID 83501

(208) 413-6238

Seefineflowermarker.com


Heather’s husband Chris originally didn’t understand her desire to label irises. He also wondered, why on Earth would anyone bother making little metal tombstones for their irises? Heather and Chris tried compromising on short plastic labels that were less visually obtrusive. Unfortunately, heavy rainfall in North Carolina saturates the clay soil and washes lightweight plastic labels out of the ground. This defeats the purpose of labels. Alleah quickly responded to Heather’s request for her first See-Fine plant markers as a birthday present and her husband couldn’t refuse the gift. Today Heather and Chris sink metal markers deep into the soil to preserve both iris identity and marital bliss. 



Heather’s inheritance: Metal plant markers from Alleah’s garden


While discussing labeling methods with members of our local AIS affiliate, the Eastern North Carolina Iris Society (ENCIS), members Diana Dudley and her husband Dean Richards suggested burying plastic backup markers. A young visitor to their Bee Happy Farm once collected up a whole handful of metal iris markers and presented them to Diana as a bouquet! Alleah and many others have shared similar stories. Heather now buries a plastic backup label with every iris in her garden and checks them against the metal tag when it’s time to dig and divide irises. She also uses her plastic labels to tag irises for resale. The pot provides good drainage and if a label floats up it doesn’t leave the pot.


ENCIS members Susan and Glenn Grigg also suggested that drawing a planting map can help keep irises labeled. Alleah made lists and planting maps of irises in her garden for many years. They were rough pencil sketches of each iris bed with names of each iris in its approximate location. During Heather’s early days planting irises in her own yard, she accidentally created planting maps by printing out pictures from the Iris Encyclopedia and taping them to paper as she planned iris beds. Heather has far too many irises to do this now, but it was fun when her collection was small.


We must not fail to mention Markers and Labels, a comprehensive review of plant markers and labels researched and edited primarily by Historic Iris Preservation Society (HIPS) member Charlie Carver. This wonderful article appeared in the HIPS publication ROOTS Volume 31, Issue 1 (Spring 2018). A six-page treatment that includes many photos of labels from 15 U.S. companies including See-Fine, Kincaid, and Paw Paw Everlast. The latter was mentioned by ROOTS editor Nancy McDonald, who lives in far northern Michigan where nature provides 200-300” of snow each winter. This kind of weight bends the zinc Paw Paw Everlast markers, so she now uses Kincaid.


The Markers and Labels article also describes many plastic markers. Alleahs’s iris hybridizer friends Ross and Barbara BeVier, formerly of My Wild Iris Rows nursery, recommend products from Macore Corporation in Oregon. The BeViers used 1.25” wide x 12” long heavy duty white plastic markers in their iris fields. Heather uses the smaller 1” x 6” version for her plastic backup markers.

Macore 

PO Box 338

Lafayette, OR 97127

800-331-9555

Macore.com


Family members differ slightly in how they create identification labels to adhere on plant markers, and methods reflect our needs and goals. If we need to quickly make a few labels, we all own Brother P-Touch label makers loaded with ½ in. wide TZ-231 laminated white tape with black lettering. Using laminated tape is important because labels need to be reasonably waterproof. If many labels are desired, we start typing away on a computer and find the nearest laser printer. Avery 5520 Weatherproof Address Labels are available from office supply stores and have thirty 1” x 2 5/8” adhesive labels per sheet. Ink-jet printing won’t stand up in outdoor conditions, and regular paper labels just aren’t durable enough. Some office supply stores sell their own brand of weatherproof labels, but in our experience Avery brand is best. Such labels have been known to last at least ten years!


Labeling supplies

Most of the irises we grow and treasure were created through hybridization.  At minimum, their plant labels include the registered name, hybridizer, and year of introduction. It is important to understand that the year an iris is introduced into commerce may be later than the year the name was registered with AIS. In the Iris Encyclopedia entries, the year of introduction appears next to a business name at or near the end of the description. The year of registration often appears with a capital R and is listed near the beginning of the description. AIS e-members can quickly access a database of iris introductions and registrations without pictures. This database is useful if you are trying to make labels in a hurry, or want to determine if an iris name is available. 


Sometimes our labels also distinguish between hybridizers with the same last name by adding a first initial. Alleah likes to add abbreviated descriptors next to cultivar name, for any iris other than tall bearded. For example, iris cultivar ‘Concertina’ is an intermediate bearded (IB), space age (SA), rebloomer (RE). If an iris is part of Alleah’s American Dykes Medal collection, she includes this honor and the year it won. Heather likes to include this highest AIS medal and other AIS awards on labels she makes for her nursery business, the Broley Homestead. She uses the various awards on her iris labels to describe the multi-year, multi-tier “Miss Universe'' like competition in which judges evaluate irises of all types for their worthiness in the garden. ‘Concertina’ earned the Award of Merit in 2006, so Heather’s label for it looks like this:


Weatherproof address label on galvanized metal plant marker


In 2020, our current family matriarch and iris expert Alleah Haley continued training her eldest daughter and two granddaughters in methods for digging and labeling our treasured plants.  The crew, including Heather, spent a week digging and processing over 300 bearded and beardless cultivars. Alleah had decided it was time to downsize, sell her home in Northern California, and move closer to family.  Luckily for the irises, she decided to sell during digging season. Like many long time iris lovers, Alleah seemed to be growing irises everywhere and in every way imaginable. It was a labeling adventure we will not soon forget. Remember, labels help future generations understand and appreciate a treasure we pass along.



Gertie’s descendants spent three summers digging irises together in preparation for Alleah’s move to North Carolina.


Labeling is just as important during division as it is during cultivation, perhaps even more so. Until Alleah’s oldest daughter and granddaughters started helping her dig irises, they were unable to appreciate how methodical the process is to keep the identity of an iris known. They developed a new appreciation for labeling irises, and were eager to inherit metal plant markers too. We dig one cultivar at a time and place its metal marker upside down in a large plastic flower pot.  Next, we break apart rhizomes and place those that have not bloomed in the pot with the metal plant marker. Digging is VERY tiring. When we want a break, we move pots holding each cultivar to the shade for further processing. To avoid confusion, the cultivars stored in one pot are processed by one individual and it is their responsibility to ALWAYS know the identity of what they are handling and labeling. 


Labeling irises in the shade is a lot more enjoyable than labeling in the sun.


After trimming iris roots and leaves to the desired length, we set about making temporary labels for our treasures. For bearded irises, we use rags to gently wipe away a waxy layer (a protective cuticle) and write the iris name on a single inner iris leaf using a black permanent marker. Beardless irises are “diapered” by wrapping the rootball tightly in wet paper towels with a rubber band. A plastic knife with iris name written in black permanent marker is added next, followed by a tightly wrapped plastic bag and another rubber band. 


Because labeling is so important, it helps to buy good permanent markers.  Some irisarians swear by Milwaukee Tool Company “Inkzall'' markers available in the tool section at Home Depot. If these are not available, a black Sanford Ink Co. Sharpie or  Bic Mark-It do just fine. However, it seems like the “Inkzall'' markers don’t dry out as badly when uncapped for long periods of time. Fair warning: labels made using porous paper or written with a permanent marker might not last long outdoors. It is important to create durable labels before the temporary one deteriorates. If you forget, your planting map quickly transforms into a treasure map!


Irises with temporary labels and Heather’s plastic backup labels


In our gardens, irises added to our collection receive a metal plant marker with weatherproof label soon after planting. By giving our treasured plants informative and durable labels we connect with people we love, even when they aren’t with us. Those outside our immediate family seem to appreciate knowing the heritage and community behind our iris collection, and eagerly support our effort by adding the plants from our extended “iris family” to their garden. Even gardeners who choose not to label irises from us recognize they are growing something very special. Our love of irises becomes intertwined with theirs. Remember, labels help future generations understand and appreciate a treasure we pass along. 

 


Alleah Haley with iris ‘Beverly Sills’ (Hager 1979)



For Comments:

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