Thursday, April 18, 2013

Why we garden, why we wait


Back in the spring of 2010, I received a gift from a fellow gardener. Well - truth be told - it was a gift I solicited myself.

I had taken a garden tour and was entranced by a beautiful rose I'd seen. After a bit of thought, I decided to write a note to the gardener, thanking her for her hospitality, and asked if I could have a cutting off that rose. Clara graciously invited me to her garden, and by October of the same year, I had a tiny rooted slip.

This spring, it just bloomed for me for the first time.


My little slip has turned into a healthy, sprawling, climbing rose that is covered with clusters of buds opening to cool pink pompon-like flowers, with a delicate scent. Clara told me her mother had brought the rose from Colombia, and that it's name is "Silva Madre." I have never found a reference to it online.

Healthy rose on its own roots
So, now, in addition to Clara's vigorously blooming plant in her historic Hancock Park garden, there's one in  Topanga.

Flowers are just 1 1/2 inch across
And if you want one....you can have one too. Only you might have to wait a couple of years for the flowers. Just call me. This is how we save lost roses.

5 comments:

smalltownme said...

Oh so lovely! I would not trust my brown thumb with such a rare beauty but I hope someone else will cherish a cutting.

MAYBELLINE said...

THAT is going to look lovely as it grows. And you will have such an interesting story to share. Beautiful.

Big Bad Bald Bastard said...

It's amazing how much life is in plants- from a tiny cutting, you can get a new plant. Plants really are mind-boggling.

Karen (formerly kcinnova) said...

Beautiful! I remember your post about the garden tour and your being brave enough to go back and ask for a cutting. That is a rose with an important story!

Claudia from Idiot's Kitchen said...

I love pink roses. They remind me of my dear little grandma who could grown anything. Even better than a beautiful plant is a beautiful plant with a good backstory.