Monday, July 26, 2021

Blooming Irises, The Last Reminder of a Village That Was

By Gary Salathe

A project of the Louisiana Iris Conservation Initiative (LICI) now has an important historical aspect to it. 

Here's the backstory:

The Battle of New Orleans took place on January 8, 1815 and was the last event in the War of 1812 between the British and the new American nation. The battle between the professional British army and the rag-tag, thrown together, US military force resulted in a victory for the young United States over what was then a world power.

The Battle of New Orleans took place on January 8, 1815. Unbeknownst to the participants of the battle, a treaty had been signed 18 days before by the United States and Britain, ending the war of 1812.  

In 1855 plans were made to build a monument near the location of the earthworks that the Americans, led by Andrew Jackson, stood behind to successfully repulse the British. It was not completed until the land was transferred to the federal government in 1907 because funding was in short supply.

In 1864 the Union Army established a cemetery to bury Civil War casualties near the site of the famous battleground. Over the years, soldiers from nearly all of America’s wars have been buried in this hallowed ground; now called the Chalmette National Cemetery.

On August 10, 1939, Congress established Chalmette Battlefield as a National Historical Park. The two historic parcels of property have been separated from one another since the early 1800’s by a tract of land that was purchased by Pierre Fazende, a “free man of color.” In 1856 Pierre turned the land over to his son who divided the property into 33 lots and sold them to other free people of color. After the Civil War, some lots were sold to freed slaves, which would have given them ownership of property for the first time.  

A recent painting of what the village of Fazendeville would have 
looked like in its prime.  

As time passed, a one-room school house, Baptist church, dance hall, grocery store and two barrooms appeared along the single street and it slowly developed into a village. The village became known as Fazendeville, and was home to thirty families living in thirty homes.  Life in Fazendeville remained tranquil and undisturbed for more than 100 years.  However, a chain of events began, beyond the control of the families, that would forever change their lives.

In 1962, civic boosters in the area began efforts to unite the Chalmette Battlefield with the Chalmette National Cemetery. This involved taking possession of the field that laid between the two, which was the land that British soldiers marched across in their attack on the American lines.  They wanted to create one large tract of land for the Chalmette National Historic Park. The timing was to coincide with the sesquicentennial of the Battle of New Orleans on its 150th anniversary in 1965. There was only one problem: homes and buildings of Fazendeville sat on land separating the battlefield from the cemetery.

The village of Fazendeville was located right in the middle of the 
historic Chalmette Battlefield.

 
The residents of Fazendeville were soon overwhelmed by the drive to combine these federal properties. In the “Can Do” age of the 1950’s and 1960’s huge public works projects across the country moved forward using the accepted wisdom that whole communities being displaced isn't enough of a reason to stop progress. A legal process to expropriate property from Fazendeville residents began.
 

 Fazendeville

At the time, a typical new home in the area appraised for $16,500. Residents of Fazendeville were paid $6,000 for their older homes, making it financially impossible for many to find a home to replace the one they lost. 

 

Some of the buildings in Fazendeville are shown in this photo. It was taken as planning was underway to expropriate the properties.

In early 1965, the last building in Fazendeville was bulldozed and debris hauled off. Within a year the ground was scraped clear so that only a slight indention of the old roadbed could be seen... if you looked very carefully.

 


The photo shows the 1965 sesquicentennial event for the battlefield as it was underway. 


Fast-forward to 2020: 

 

Until the 1930’s, Chalmette Battlefield was bordered by a cypress swamp on the North with the river batture (wetland) along the Mississippi River on the South. The site is in St. Bernard Parish where Louisiana irises grew in vast numbers within its swamps and marshes throughout history. Because of this, the US Park Service approved a Louisiana Iris Conservation Initiative (LICI) proposed planting of native Louisiana irises in a bog located along the south side of the battlefield. Due to rigorous criteria used to approve proposed projects on US National Park Service property, this was only the second permit issued at the battlefield in the last ten years. It was approved in part because staff at the park thought there were no irises growing on the property.

 

This is what I found when I walked out into the field for the first time in February, 2021.

 

On February 10, 2021, almost a year after the iris planting project was proposed, I was one of four volunteers that planted the first batch of test irises.  When we were finished, I noticed a clump of what looked like Louisiana irises growing out in the field across the road from where we were working. A few days later I received permission to walk the field and discovered multiple patches of Louisiana irises that included anywhere from one hundred to multiple hundreds of irises in each. I assumed these were wild, light blue I. giganticaerulea. This species of Louisiana iris is native to the area, and I thought they may have been overlooked by the park staff because the largest patches were a long way from the road. This field is never cut in March or April, so there would be no reason for any of the park staff to be out in the field at the time these irises would be in bloom.

We made plans to walk the field during bloom season and gathered up a group of LICI’s supporters and some of the park staff. They had become very interested in the mysteriousness of Louisiana irises growing in the middle of the battlefield. Interest peaked further because the irises appeared to have been growing there for many years, if not decades.

 

Friends of LICI and staff of the US Park Service find the first patch of blooming Louisiana irises on the trip out into the field on March 29th.  We estimated that there were a total of a few thousand Louisiana irises if all of the patches of irises were combined.


On March 29th the group assembled in a small parking area on the paved road and started walking into the field. We quickly discovered that the irises were not light blue I. giganticaerulea, but were lavender-purple. These irises were most likely I. vinicolor which results from the first cross of two types of Louisiana irises: I. giganticaerulea and I. fulva.  Every iris spread out over a long and narrow section of the field was the same-colored iris, with some slight variations in color found in just a few clumps.

 

 
I. vinicolor are shown in one of the iris patches on the Chalmette Battlefield.  
(Photo by Paul Christiansen)

Then the group ran across a few clumps of plants in bloom that made us all stop in our tracks. It was a non-native plant, originally from Africa, called the crinum lily. Seeds of the crinum lily are known to have been brought to the Americas by slaves. It’s been grown in gardens of some African Americans since then, passed down from one generation to another, as a reminder of their heritage.

 

Some of the crinum lilies are seen blooming on the edge of one of  the patches of irises. 

(Photo by Paul Christiansen)

We then located the faint outline of the old  Fazendeville roadbed. By following the roadbed through the field, we figured out that all of the irises and crinum lilies were growing on only one side of the road, the side where the houses of Fazendeville residents once stood. The clumps of irises also ended about where their rear lot line would have been. 

We all stood there thinking the same thought; we had likely found the remnants and offspring of two species of plants that once grew in the gardens surrounding the homes in Fazendeville. Somehow, the plants survived when the homes were moved or torn down in the 1960’s and are now spreading out in the field right in the middle of the Chalmette Battlefield. It was an emotional moment for many of us. We found a silent reminder of the town and people that once lived in this place. For an iris person, these are emotions you never thought that you'd have as part of your hobby.


One of only three small clumps of irises that were a little off  colored from the others.  They appeared to have more of the red I. fulva color.

It makes sense that I. vinicolor would have been irises of choice for people in Fazendeville to grow. During the first half of the 20th century, there may have been tens of thousands light blue colored I. giganticaerulea irises blooming along the roads in Chalmette and the red I. fulva along the Mississippi River batture nearby. People would have collected the harder-to-find wine colored I. vinicolor iris to plant in their gardens. Fazendeville was located in a section of Chalmette where the distance separating the cypress swamps to the north holding the I. giganticaerulea iris and the Mississippi River batture holding I. fulva is the narrowest. There were likely I. vinicolor irises growing in the area as a result of natural cross-pollination between the two species.


We are excited that what started off as a simple iris restoration project now has important historical significance. Plans are underway for LICI volunteers and the staff of the park to move some of the irises and crinum lilies to a location near the parking area with a written display installed to create a living memorial to the residents of Fazendeville.

The Louisiana Iris Conservation Initiative website can be found here: https://www.licisaveirises.com/

Recent articles about our work can be found here: https://www.licisaveirises.com/news

Our Facebook page can be found here:  https://www.facebook.com/licisaveirises/

Our email address is: licisaveirises@gmail.com

Monday, July 19, 2021

Re-plant at Smokin Heights 2021/22

By Mel Schiller

During our last blog post in January 2021, we were in the middle of digging and trimming irises and getting ready for re-plant in South Australia.

We have now completely finished re-plant for this season. Give it a few months and standard dwarf bearded irises will be blooming. It is crazy how fast the days are going by.

This past season we were not overly happy with a section of the iris field and the way rhizomes were growing. We shifted fresh soil from around our property into this area. 


Once the soil was smoothed over our dog Aura inspected it.


The soil consisted of top soil with some clay for added benefit to rhizomes. At planting time we also top dress fertilizer so that it is worked into the soil prior to planting.

 

We completed trimming iris fans by the time the soil was ready to plant in. Rainfall has been extremely low so we needed to water the ground by hand to get some moisture in before tilling could be done.


Once the ground is prepared we lay water drip line down to work as a guide to get rows planted straight.

 

Mel plants the field while Bailey organizes all rhizomes into categories to reflect our catalogue. This makes varieties so much easier to find!

We plant all the irises by hand. We cannot plant rhizomes on the surface because the searing hot sun will scald and burn them. We get much better results if each rhizome is pushed into the ground tip first and the soil smoothed out behind the rhizome. The rhizome is around 1 cm under dirt.  We cut old venetian blinds into pieces for labels or plastic display tags.  Venetian labels are written with Hobbytex (an Australian-made craft paint that comes in a ballpoint tube) and the plastic tags with pencil. 


Because the ground hasn't had water on it for many months the soil becomes hydrophobic. Water from the dripline system eventually gets moisture into the ground. 


This field is now home to tall bearded irises only. The other varieties are elsewhere on the property this season! We ran out of room.......😏




We place rows of water dripline about a foot apart, with a wider walkway between rows. This season we planted each variety of iris 2 rhizomes wide, staggering as we go.  

Each row was then top dressed with a pre-emergent herbicide and we timed it beautifully. Shortly after we received some much needed rain which fell at exactly the right time. The irises and pre-emergent were watered in by rainfall. The pre-emergent stops germination of self-seeding weeds by putting a barrier on the soil. Since irises are not germinating, the pre-emergent does not affect them in any way. 


Sunrise is an especially beautiful time of day. Colours of the new day are gorgeous and there are few noises except birdlife and the surrounding animals. I find it an important way to start my day!

My eldest son and brother to Bailey working up the area where we needed more room for irises....😜

Bailey is now working on this season's catalogue and he will be starting to update the website shortly. With bloom around 3 months away time is flying by and the gardens still need to be maintained. Keep an eye on our Facebook page "Smokin Heights" for regular updates and to follow our bloom season. 


 

Monday, July 12, 2021

On the Iris Road Again: Diana Ford’s Garden

By Bryce Williamson

The pandemic had so messed up my thinking that it was at the end of the iris bloom season in Northern California that I realized that it was safe to make a day trip to see a garden. And the best day for the trip would fall on Mothers’ Day. With the far north of the state blooming a bit later and curious about the Diana Ford’s hybridizing efforts, I set out early on Sunday for Hopland.

'Centennial Celebration'

Hopland is one of those census designated areas located on the west bank of the Russian River 13 miles south-southeast of Ukiah in the Sanel Valley. It is a rustic farming community situated amongst oak covered coastal foothills. Most of the valley and many of the rolling hills are covered in vineyards.


But just before Highway 101 narrows from four lanes to two and crosses the Russian River, I turned off to the east to find the Ford garden.

The Fords built a retirement home on property that had been owned by her grandfather. The 14 acres are surrounded by vineyards. Diana comes naturally into irises as both her grandmother and mother grew them. When she retired in 2012 as a computer programmer, she bought a few irises, went to the Santa Rosa Iris Society plant sale, and we all know what happened next.

Diana and Don Ford

These days she is growing around 4000 seedlings each year. The current focus of her hybridizing is on pinks, bicolors, olive toned flowers, and rebloomers. As she later wrote to me, “I love iris with the white standards and light within, so I’ll always look at those first. I love bright clean color. Try to work with iris that get me excited.”

178SBLB2

238SB6


167WCG1

323FS4

187RCI2

At the 2019 National’s blind competition of seedlings, her seedling, now named ‘Centennial Celebration’ won. Diana explained to me that she had not expected to introduce so soon, but winning the competition resulted in 'Centennial Celebration' being introduced in 2020.

I not only enjoyed my visit, but also brought home some canes of a wonderful single rose Altissimo. It was a long shot that I could root the cuttings, but 6 out of 9 are still alive and giving me hope that they will survive. It would be a wonderful addition to my yard. Not only were the irises of interest, but I also enjoyed the garden.



After I the visit, I took the grand tour of Hopland and then found a shady spot by the Russian River to eat my lunch. It made for a beautiful and peaceful day. It felt very good to be on the road again.


Images of Ford seedlings and 'Centennial Celebration' by Diana Ford. All other images by Bryce Williamson.