Monday, April 9, 2012

Illumination - By Keith Keppel

In a first combined effort of IRISES (the Bulletin) and World of Irises (the Blog), we are bringing you the amazing pictures and descriptions of Keith Keppel's iris seedlings featured in the April 2012 issue of IRISES, the Bulletin of The American Iris Society.

You will find the several-pages long "Illumination" article in the printed issue of IRISES, or online available to our worldwide audience, if you are an e-member of The American Iris Society. (To find out how to obtain a copy of IRISES, or for membership information scroll to the bottom of this post.)

Keith Keppel says:
"In 1940, when the first ones appeared in the Sass seedling beds in Nebraska, they were recorded in the selection books as "odds." In the fifties, when show schedules in northern California had a class for them (remember, this was in the day of color/pattern classes, not cultivar shows), you would find plicata, fancy plicata, and "true fancy." In the southern half of the state, you might hear them referred to as "weirdies." It wasn't until 1972 that they had an official name, when the Median Iris Society's Genetics Study Panel, chaired by Bee Waburton, proposed the name "luminata" for this strange pattern."

06-199A—A nearly solid color, with unobvious veining.  ('Teenybopper' sib X 'High Master' sdlg.)
06-193A—Also has an obvious heart, no obvious veining, with edge present and giving bicolor effect.  (((('Fancy Dress' x 'New Leaf') x 'Moonlit Water') x Blyth sdlg.) X 'Montmartre')
05-81A—Big, bold white heart, dark almost uniformly colored fall without obvious veining.  (High Master sdlg. X (('Fancy Dress' x 'New Leaf') x 'Moonlit Water')
05-79B—Unusual that the unmarked edge is yellow on standards, but white on falls.  ('High Master' sdlg. X (('Fancy Dress' x 'New Leaf)' x 'Moonlit Water')
05-78J—An example of a very wide, large area unmarked with anthocyanin:  white heart plus yellow shoulders.  ('Montmartre' X 'Lip Service')
05-75C—Also showing all three aspects of the luminatas.  More bicolored, and also shows a variation in fall color application, with pigment deeper toward center and paling to unmarked edge.  (('Fancy Dress' x 'Vapor') X 'High Master' sdlg.)
05-69—Included for the very obvious edge, both standards and falls.  ((('Fancy Dress' x 'New Leaf') x 'Moonlit Water') X 'High Master' sdlg.)
04-101C—('Moonlit Water' sdlg. X 'High Master' sdlg.)
05-74A—A good example of a “typical” luminata: obvious pale edge, obvious pale fall veining, obvious unmarked heart. ('Moonlit Water' sdlg. X 'High Master' sdlg.)
05-75G—A very pale application of anthocyanin pigments.  (('Fancy Dress' x 'Vapor') X 'High Master' sdlg.)
05-79J—One of the bluest.  ('High Master' sdlg. X (('Fancy Dress' x 'New Leaf') x 'Moonlit Water')

06-198A—A good example of fall veining.  ('Teenybopper' sib X 'Teenybopper')

06-201D—Wide standard edge, inconspicuous fall edge.  ('Teenybopper' sib X ('Moonlit Water' sdlg. X 'High Master' sdlg.))
07-211A—Another near-solid, with inconspicuous edge; note the pale, contrasting style arms.  ('Fancy Woman' X ('Moonlit Water' sdlg. x 'High Master' sdlg.))
IRISES Editor Notes: Keith Keppel is one of the most respected iris hybridizers in the world, with three Dykes Medals to his credit. Known to many as the plicata man, Keith has a special fondness for plicatas,  luminatas, and their relatives. 

To obtain a printed copy of IRISES, the Bulletin of The American Iris Society, or to read it online please read AIS membership information here.

Swing Into Spring With Iris Garden Visits

     With the arrival of spring flowers, it is time to think about seeing irises in bloom. Since you are reading this blog, I am assuming that you have an interest in irises. In the pageant of color of the garden each year, irises herald the arrival of spring and the riot of color that will come in the upcoming months. To see irises in their splendor is to understand why they are so essential to the garden and why gardens can put up with the need to divide their iris clumps every 3-4 years.
Superstition Iris Gardens 2011--Williamson image
'Subtle Beauty' (Tasco)--Tasco image
     If you are lucky, you may have a local iris society in your area. For a list of local iris societies, you can check The American Iris Society and under the link “Resources and Iris Links” you will find a list of local societies by Regions listed as “AIS Local Club Websites”— each region is made up of a part of state or more than one state.
Paul Black image
     Going to an iris show is a good place to start to see all types of irises, though usually shows are designed for best Tall Bearded bloom. At the show you will meet local members and the local society often will have a garden tour that you can join and see irises in the garden. Take along a notepad to write down the names of varieties that you like and do well in your area.

Napa County Iris Garden
     You may also have a local garden selling irises and a visit there is always productive.
     If this whets your interest, then the next step may be to join the local society. They are a good source of social interaction with other gardeners, plants, and good information.
     If you are really interested, considering joining the American Iris Society. The society has a new, young, energetic editor, Kelly Norris, who is working hard to produce a diverse product. If you interest is in Tall Bearded, TheTall Bearded Iris Society is a good bet—a 10.00 a year membership, with two magazine sized, full color publications a year, is a great deal for the money.
'Big Bang Theory'-- Jedick image


You will find many catalog and online sources for irises. I have had good luck buying from the following sources (note that I have restrict this list to sources of lower to mid priced varieties not wanting to scare you off with the boutique gardens that specialize in new hybrids that may be as much as $65.00 per plant).  I cannot guarantee that you will have success with these gardens, but they are a good place to start looking at irises.
'Endless Ocean' -- Beaumont Ridge image
Beaumont Ridge Iris.  An interesting mix of newer and older tall bearded irises that grow and bloom well in eastern Oregon.  Prices are very good and the owner is generous with extra plants based on the size of the order.  The website is simple to use with most of the varieties list with a color picture. This is a good nursery for someone starting an iris collection.  http://www.beaumontridgeiris.com


Blue Jay Iris Gardens -- Jedick image
Blue Jay Iris Garden. They have a huge list with many older, tried and proven varieties. The website is a bit hard to navigate and if you have specific varieties that you are trying to buy, use the search function of the site to locate them. They are hybridizing Space Age irises and have some very interesting recent introductions in that area: http://www.bluejiris.com

'Center Line' (T. Johnson '11) -- Paul Black image
Mid America Iris Gardens. Full color catalog or look at the PDF catalog at the website; there is also a PDF of the order form so that you can order if you want. They have a good selection of median irises (bearded irises under 27” tall) too: http://www.mid-americagarden.com

'Teasing Tiger' -- Napa County Iris photo
Napa Country Iris Garden. Lovely stock and the easiest to use website that I have found for any iris garden. The list is a nice combination of newer varieties and older, tried and proven irises: http://www.napairis.com

'Harmonous Flow' (Nicodemus '12)--Nicodemus image
'Pinkablue' (Richardson '12)--Richardson image
Rockytop Gardens. Black and white catalog with some color. The owner looks for good, hardy varieties that go well in his “freeze and thaw” climate in Tennessee and he is especially adept at finding varieties that have been overlooked, but are very good. Stock is very nice:http://rockytopgardens.com
Schreiner's Iris Garden. Full color catalog or order online. They also have a good selection of slightly older medians and a small selection of beardless irises too: http://www.schreinersgardens.com

'Sand Dancer' -- Tasco image
Superstition Iris Garden. No website and the catalog is $1.50. Listing over 1000 varieties, they have everything from the newest varieties to historically important iris from the past. One of the few commercial sources for arilbreds. Their stock is always very good and don't miss the $3.00 section towards the back of the catalog with some really wonderful bargain iris. They just started a Facebook Page: http://www.facebook.com/superstitionirisgardens


Saturday, April 7, 2012

Iris Classics: 'Cahokia'

Eva Faught grew and hybridized irises in her southern Illinois garden. In the 1940's she started working with many of the California blues, and from a complicated parentage involving 'Purissima', 'Santa Barbara', & 'Santa Clara' she created one of irisdom's best blues: 'Cahokia'. Receiving instant acclaim, it went on to be used extensively as a breeding iris and it has left a long and delightful legacy of descendants. It is in the background of such luminaries as 'Rippling Waters' (DM 1966), 'Whole CLoth' (DM 1962), 'Babbling Brook' (DM 1972), and 'Mystique' (DM 1980), along with countless numbers of Award of Merit winners. Schreiner's used it heavily in the development of their blue lines.


'Cahokia' is a very tall iris, with lightly waved flowers of lightest blue sporting a pale lemon beard. A most attractive combination. They were raved about for their very blue tone without a trace of lavender, and my photos do not do them justice. Cooley's Gardens catalog for 1951 described it thus:
"Large exquisitely formed flowers of light butterfly-blue delicately veined deeper. There is no hint of lavender in the color and the haft is smooth and clean. Bright golden yellow beard. 42 inches tall, with widely spaced branches."

Schreiner's Iris Lover's catalog for 1958 added:
"One of the finest blues. A hint of turquoise in the blue gives a positively enchanting shade of blue. Enhanced by a pale lemon-colored beard. Cahokia is exquisite."

It won an Honorable Mention from AIS in 1949, and an Award of Merit in 1951.


I'm not able to locate any biographical information on Miss Faught. I believe she was born in Iowa, but lived much of her life in Carbondale, Illinois where she worked as a bacteriologist. Her hybridizing career seems to have been short, introducing in the 1940's and a few into the mid-fifties. Other than 'Cahokia' her most acclaimed variety is probably its sister seedling 'Pierre Menard', which was also widely used in breeding blues.


'Cahokia' is still a wonderful garden iris, being hardy, free flowering, and making a light and lovely impact in the perennial border. It blends well with so many colors but is particularly pleasing with light yellows, whites and tans. A clump in full bloom is spectacular. If you enjoy mid-century historic irises you will certainly love this classic iris variety. Give it a try. you won't be disappointed.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Hybridizing Louisiana (LA) Irises

Hybridizing Louisiana (LA) irises, or any iris, is great fun and can produce an iris that you can name and introduce.  Hybridizing is simply taking the pollen from one iris (the pollen parent) and applying the pollen to another iris (the pod parent).  There is really nothing very technical about it and anyone can "hybridize" with just a little instruction.

Seedling by Ron Betzer of Lafayette, LA

When you cross one iris with another the "pod parent" will set the seeds.  In LA irises this can produce from 20 to 80 seeds.  The seed pod is harvested after it has ripened and the seeds are carefully removed from the pod.  I usually soak the seeds in water a few days and then plant them immediately.  The "seedlings" (plants obtained from planting seeds) will usually germinate starting in about November.  The seedlings will grow through the fall, the next year, and bloom the third year.



Seedling by Ron Killingsworth
This is one of my seedlings from a cross I made between 'Jeri' by N. Bertinot (1984) and 'Night Thunder' by R. Morgan (2000). The seedling I will discuss is the one in the center.  The seedling to the right is a different seedling from the same "cross".  'Jeri' is a very dark iris and 'Night Thunder' is also very dark, almost black.  'Night Thunder' has a beautiful gold steeple signal (the color markings on LA iris where the beard is located on Tall Bearded irises) and I wanted to try to produce a 'Jeri' with the signal from 'Night Thunder'.  Most of the seedlings were very similar to 'Jeri' or to 'Night Thunder' but this cross of two dark irises produced the above reddish iris.  It does have the 'Night Thunder' signal.  But from this cross I also had some blue seedlings. 'Night Thunder' won the Mary Swords DeBallion Medal, present by the Society for LA Irises but selected by the American Iris Society judges.  This medal is the highest award within the LA iris species (i.hexagonae).

Seedling by Ron Killingsworth

This blueish seedling came from the same cross.  It is not an outstanding seedling but look at the bud count!  You can enlarge the picture by clicking on it.  Count the number of current and spent buds.

Seedling by Ron Killingsworth
This seedling came from a cross between 'Night Thunder' and 'C'est Si Bon' by J. C. Taylor (1983).  'C'est Si Bon' has a white spray pattern around the signal and I wanted to produce more irises with the pattern.  This seedling is actually darker than the picture.  I have a hard time getting nice pictures with a digital camera when the iris is really dark or dark purple.

If you are interested in trying your hand at "hybridizing" there are many books available that discuss the subject and you can also obtain information from the Society for Louisiana Iris.  Just click on the button for "hybridizing".

Read up, become an "expert" and then get out there and dob some pollen! If you are interested in crossing irises of different species, take a look at the web site for The Species Iris Group of North America.  The folks in that organization will cross anything!

The irises beckon so off I go to take more pictures.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

IRISES Spring Issue

If you can't wait to read and look at the exciting iris pictures on every issue of IRISES, well you don't have to wait much longer. Here's the cover of the spring issue of IRISES, the Bulletin of The American Iris Society.

As you know, IRISES is published quarterly and sent to members of the AIS via either printed format or shared with e-members via a digital reader. So, now no matter where you live in the world you can enjoy perusing this magnificent magazine cover to cover as soon as it's released.  To find out how easy it is to become a member of The American Iris Society, click here.



The featured articles in this issue of IRISES include:
  • My Favorite Irises: by Jim Hedgecock, Missouri (front cover is a clue)
  • Selling Irises at the Farmers Market: by Pat McNeal, Maryland
  • Basic Bearded Iris Pests and Deceases: by Editor Kelley D. Norris, Iowa
  • An Iris Dream: by Naomi DiVincenzo, Colorado
  • The Genetic Domain on TB irises: by Dan H. Meckenston, Kansas
  • The Quest for Orange: by Heather Pryor, Australia
  • Illumination: by Keith Keppel, Oregon
  • 2012 Photo Contest Rules
And some of the regular sections are:
  • Section Happenings
  • Milestones
  • Youth Views
  • In Your Backyard
  • Photographing Irises
  • Convention Information
We hope you will receive this issue of IRISES in the next couple of weeks, and or check The American Iris Society website to find out if the electronic copy has been posted.

We appreciate your support, and hope to see you at the National Convention to be held in Ontario, California on April 16 - 21.

Monday, April 2, 2012

The Amazing Plicatas of Jim Gibson


After a visit to the garden of Dr. Sydney B. Mitchell in 1940 Jim Gibson embarked on a quest to improve the color range in the plicata pattern in irises. He went home that day with pollen from a brown toned seedling and put it on 'Sacramento', the only plicata still blooming in his garden in Porterville, CA. And thus started a long line of iris breeding that lasted across five decades and took Mr. Gibson to the height of acclaim in the iris world when his beautiful 'Kilt Lilt' won the Dykes Memorial Medal in 1976. He was also awarded the AIS Hybridizers Medal in 1965, and the Premio Firenze Medal in international competition in Italy that same year.

[Photo by K.Keppel, courtesy AIS Slide library]

I first noticed the Gibson varieties when I started collecting old Cooley's Gardens catalogs. Cooley's introduced his creations for many years and featured dozens of beautiful photos of them. Having early been hooked on brown irises you can imagine how fascinated I was with the rainbow of brown toned irises Mr. Gibson had made for us. Colors and tones that didn't appear in any other pattern were routinely coming out of the Gibson breeding lines. His work greatly expanded the palette available for the garden and the iris border. Here are a few that I have collected.

1960's introduction 'Chinquapin' is a beautifully tailored flower in a delicious golden-brown that always makes me think of cinnamon toast. Like many of Mr. Gibson's creations, it is not a flashy color and has a rather somber aspect when shaded, but once the sun hits shines down it lights up with warm, rich, sparkling tones.


The following year Cooley's introduced a variety that was to gain wide renown and find an enduring popularity. 'Cayenne Capers' was a deep, rich, red-pepper plicata that caught everyone's eye. The coloration so thickly applied that only a small patch of cream at the center of the falls showed thru. It is still a favorite with collectors today. It is a hardy, vigorous grower and reliable of bloom as well.


1962 was a banner year, with several fabulous introductions, of which I have three: 'Wild Ginger', a large, ruffled soft golden brown that shows pinker tones in the sun; 'Dream Spun', a blend of pinkish amethyst on white with lots of flare; and 'Siva Siva', a rich combination of old-gold standards over mahogany-red on white falls. All three were big advances in color and form for plicatas.


The sunlight completely changes their tones taking them from drab to dramatic in an instant.


With the widely flaring falls on 'Siva Siva' a clump in full bloom appears like a cloud of whirling dervishes. It brings energy and exuberance to the perennial border.


'Flashing Gem' from 1963 is an excellent iris featuring large blooms on tall stems. Tho the blooms sport a nice wave to the petals, an overall smooth grace is the effect to the eye. Mr. Gibson relied on the Sass iris 'Tiffany' in his early work and you can see the influence here, but in a much cleaner and more distinct pattern. The flowers are a soft, buttery yellow ringed with a deep rose-pink.


1963 brought us the out-of-this-world styling of 'In Orbit'. Nothing like it had been seen before, a dazzling new pattern for plicatas. The standards are a solid tan with a light flush of violet, while the falls are white deeply peppered with dark plum.Such a vivid and striking combination and one of my favorites.


'Radiant Apogee', from 1966, is well named - it is one of the brightest yellows in the garden. A sparkling lemony yellow with falls banded the same on a white ground. Cute little freckles of brown are faintly and lightly scattered across the hafts, and one occasionally ventures further down. A very hardy and floriferous variety.


That same year also brought us 'Heather Hawk', described as pinkish-copper it is certainly a very different shade for a flower. The colors lighten as the bloom ages, and the petals sport lots of ruffles and waves.


'Native Chief', also a '66 introduction, is warm and rich in buckskin brown tones enlivened with plenty of gold undertones. A peppering of brown at the hafts adds more interest. the flowers are large and flaring as well.


1970's 'Island Holiday' is a brassy golden yellow with falls that sport a cream-toned center sprinkled all over with cinnamon. A big, bright, and bold flower. I can't decide if I like it or not, but it refuses to be ignored.


The last one I have to share is also from 1970. 'Mod Mode' features petals of palest pink lightly and delicately stitched rose-pink. The ruffles and waves are very pronounced, with the blooms appearing almost like seashells. A really lovely and delicate variety.


Jim Gibson was truly one of the greats in iris hybridizing, and he did so much to advance the palette and form in the flower, most especially with his plicatas. These are only a fraction of the work he did over his lifetime, and his varieties are well worth growing, enjoying and preserving for the future. I look forward to many years of beauty in my garden from his effort and inspiration, and I hope you will be inspired to look for his varieties for your garden as well.



Are you growing any Gibson plicatas? Tell us about them in the comments here or on our Facebook page, which is linked at the top left of the page.
Happy gardening!

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Iris Classics: 'W.R. Dykes'

How thrilling it is to see an original copy of the classic tome on the genus Iris by William Rickatson Dykes being offered for auction at the upcoming AIS Convention. It is very rare to see one of these prized classics being offered. In honor of this event I thought I'd highlight the classic iris named for the author - 'W.R. Dykes'. While this is one of the most important irises in the development of tall bearded yellows it is rarely seen today.


'W.R.Dykes' is a tall iris, usually reaching 3 feet, and sports large yellow blooms often streaked and mottled with red. Its appearance today tho is not how it originally started. When it was introduced in 1926 after Mr. Dykes' death it was renowned as the largest and clearest yellow yet to be created. But it was not long before the streaking and splotching showed up, which is most often blamed on the iris mosaic virus. Today the variety in my garden is usually quite heavily covered in red. It is not the most beautiful iris, but it certainly is interesting. Long lost or discarded from commerce or collections, in 1996 it was spotted growing at Presby with its name still attached by a group of intrepid HIPSters that made a pilgrimage during the Convention that year. It has since been put back into commerce by Superstition Iris Gardens and is now growing in many collections around the US.


Just as Mr. Dykes had many interests and is remembered for numerous contributions to the scientific knowledge and advancement of many plant species, 'W.R. Dykes' has more than one claim to fame as well. It was not only a great advance in size and color for yellows, with numerous prodigy that went even further in developing the class, but was also in the foundation of those few varieties used by Dave Hall to create his flamingo pink lines. It genes are still with us scattered among thousands of descendants.


While this variety is never going to be loved for its disfigured blooms and poor growth, it is loved by collectors that appreciate its history, and the tragic history of Mr. Dykes and his wife Katherine both whom died young - he after a car wreak and she after a train derailment. Read the whole story of Mr. Dykes in Clarence Mahan's book Classic Irises and the Men and Women Who Created Them. Read about the rediscovery of 'W.R. Dykes' at Presby over on the HIPS website. Who knows. Maybe the stories surrounding this variety, and all the comment and controversy that followed it thru the years, will inspire you to find beauty in its novelty and history. And perhaps you'll seek it out and add it to your garden so we can keep it around for future generations to wonder over. It's not an Iris for everyone, but it is a classic.