RE: CULT:Where did that come from
- Subject: RE: [iris]CULT:Where did that come from
- From: christian foster f*@yahoo.com
- Date: Sat, 6 May 2006 18:34:25 -0700 (PDT)
- List-archive: <http://www.hort.net/lists/iris/> (Web Archive)
Lol, how funny that y'all landed on this topic this week.
I was settin a spell t'other day just looking at my iris beds, it was dreadful hot and none of the iris I wanted to cross were blooming yet. From that particular angle the pile of bulldozer debris provided a backdrop to the beds. Now there had been for several days a couple bits of orange against the base of the pile that I had been dismissing as old dry leaves of some sort, but this particular day there were a couple of little white splashes at, oddly enough, the exact same heights as the orange splashes.
Well, I walked myself over there to see if the white splashes belonged to something that had gotten missed when I swept the area prior to the bulldozing and sure enough it was a bi-tone/ameona thing. But what really got my heart racing was those splashes of orange turned out to be an iris too!! I may yet have to stop saying I don't like oranges... because this thing...whose identity I will have to discover...is nice.
The overall impression is orange, but at certain angles there's a distinct mauve cast to the standards. The falls are really quite rust colored with orangy gold shoulders and beard traced across with veins. And it has a lovely velvet texture despite it's historic tailored form... and it fades softly... not quite giving up all its glory.
Exciting as it was, when I thunk about it I remembered that a couple years back I had gone over to the neighbors house and just picked a few small pieces here and there out of her [overgrown, neglected] bed and stuck them down under my raspberry rows. That was of course before my husband announced that he was going to bulldose the whole tree line...
Christian
ky
The Benbows <benbows@yhti.net> wrote:
Good afternoon,
I don't chime in very often but thought I would add to this topic.
I live in south central Missouri an area that was homesteaded in the 1800's.
There are still some old abandoned one room cabins and old chimney
foundations out in the middle of nowhere with iris still blooming every
year. From some of the old timers here I have learned no one has live on
these abandoned home sites for better then 60-80+ years.
Many years ago a friend of mine had purchased some nice iris. After a few
years and they had not bloomed he dug them up and threw them in his compost
pile. The following year they bloomed. Apparently he had planted them too
deep. For years now when I dig up a unwanted clump that I could not give
away I would just break them into pieces and throw them along the wood line
and ditches around our property and sure enough most root on their own and
bloom in a few years.
Bob Benbow
Camdenton Missouri zone 5
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-iris@hort.net [o*@hort.net] On Behalf Of Ross
BeVier
Sent: Friday, May 05, 2006 11:46 AM
To: iris@hort.net
Subject: RE: [iris]CULT:Where did that come from
We dig our commercial garden every year and every so often in the tilling
process a little chunk of who knows who rises up to the surface. I throw
them out over the fence in a drainage ditch along the road where people come
to oogle the iris every year on our off days.
Haven't seen anything yet but any day I expect to see something pop up out
there. The chunks we miss and which grow out of planting pattern end up out
there as well.
I half expect to see someone waiting out there one day to catch what is
coming over the fence.
Ross
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-iris@hort.net [o*@hort.net] On Behalf Of Loberg
Sent: Friday, May 05, 2006 7:28 AM
To: iris@hort.net
Subject: Re: [iris]CULT:Where did that come from
Betty,
So it is not only the Birds who drop seeds everywhere and propagate
flora all over our earth?
Seriously, I'd never heard of anyone doing this, I think it's cute.
I always find it amazing when I've found irises surviving in abandoned
homesteads when hiking, knowing they've been unattended for 30-50 years. I
know some of our older historic varieties can do it, but I do worry as to
whether many of our newer varieties could do it.
Kitty Loberg
> Earlier this year, a Master Gardener group asked how irises sometimes just
> 'appear!' I relayed this story as one possibility and they really
> enjoyed it!
>
> Years ago, an iris friend said he couldn't bear to compost left over
> rhizomes. He would drive down the road and 'pitch' these irises into
> fence rows or
> any friendly looking environment.
>
> Iris dumping is not so uncommon!
>
> ________________________________________________________
> If you don't cross them, you can't plant them!
> Betty W. in South-central KY Zone 6 ---
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