The Face of a Rose
Saturday, July 30, 2022
| Rebecca, 2005 - R. 'Mrs. Oakley Fisher' 30 July 2022
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Rosemary and I could never get excited over Penstemon digitalis ‘Husker Red’. We had
no connection to it nor did the flower have a face. Some years ago that plant
was declared Perennial of the Year.
My Delaware friend, Alex Summers, sometime in 1967, was working on a mimeograph machine to
print a journal for the American Penstemon Society. He thought [I know
because Summers told me this in person], “I hate the smell of these solvents
and I am not even interested in penstemons.” Shortly after, he started the
American Hosta Society.
I cannot
look at any hosta in my garden and not see Summers’ face or the faces of the
many hybridizers of the plants that I have met through the years. Then there are the names of hostas which
connect me to my past. As an example, Hosta ‘Strip Tease’ reminds me of the
many years I enjoyed that scene in Vancouver.
The same
happens with roses. They have a face, perhaps of the owner of the garden where
you might have seen that rose for the first time. This was the case with the single hybrid tea
rose, Rosa ‘Mrs. Oakley Fisher’. I saw her at least 17 years ago in the garden
of former and now gone president of the Vancouver Rose Society, Janet Wood.
I was
leaving her after a pleasant visit when on the gate out I spotted this yellow
rose. I asked and was told, “That’s Mrs.
Oakley Fisher.” I then immediately said, “I am going to go home and make a
large and strong mug of Earl Grey Tea. I will toast a slice of bread and spread
unsalted butter and apricot jam.” This I did!
Yellow as
well as orange were problem colours for my Rosemary who liked blues and whites
in our garden. She warmed up to Mrs. Oakley Fisher as she was not one of those
complex and much too colourful hybrid
teas. Mrs. Oakley Fisher was a delicate five-petal rose.
Not long
after I photographed our granddaughter Rebecca with the rose and her Mexican
sailor dress.
The rose
did well in our Kerrisdale garden. But she did not seem to like Kitsilano and
she finally died. Both Rosemary and I became sad. Sometime in November 2020,
weeks before Rosemary died she told me that I would need at least three large
Vietnamese terracotta pots (they handle our winters well) and a couple of bags
of dirt.
Rosemary
died on December 9 and sometime at the end of February there was a knock at my
door. I was being delivered a package with three roses from Palatine Roses back
East. One was Mrs. Oakley Fisher and the others were two other singles, R. ‘Escimo’
and R. ‘Olivier Rollinger’. The two other singles prospered to the day. Mrs. Oakley Fisher died. I was distraught.
I ordered
three of them from an Oregon nursery last year. Two promptly did not make it to
this year.
But!
My little
healthy Mrs. Oakley Fisher had two open blooms today and the promise of many
more.
And yes,
Mrs. Oakley Fisher has Rosemary and Rebecca’s face on her.
Those were the days - halcyon days
Friday, July 29, 2022
| Hosta 'Halcyon' circa 1990s |
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| Hosta 'Halcyon' 30 July 2022
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Hosta Halcyon - Elegance in Blue
Halcyon Days, which have come to mean any time of happiness
and contentment, are actually the 14 days around the winter solstice. According
to Greek legend, the halcyon, or kingfisher, built its floating nest around the
14th of December, during which time the gods calmed the seas for the nesting
and hatching time.
The above reference from the internet is about a word we
use when we look back at our own personal world in a distant past. This is
particularly true now in this 21st century. Some who may be younger
than my about to be 80 years say, “Those were the days,” perhaps not knowing
that it was the title of a 1968 song by Mary Hopkin. The world of 1968 was one
of conflict and demonstration. What were Hopkin’s better days? | Hosta 'Halcyon' 30 July 2022
|
Here are her lyrics:
Once upon a time there was a tavern
Where we used to raise a glass or two
Remember how we laughed away the hours
And think of all the great things we would do
Those were the days my friend
We thought they'd never end
We'd sing and dance forever and a day
We'd live the life we choose
We'd fight and never lose
For we were young and sure to have our way
La la la la...
Then the busy years went rushing by us
We lost our starry notions on the way
If by chance I'd see you in the tavern
We'd smile at one another and we'd say
Those were the days my friend
We thought they'd never end
We'd sing and dance forever and a day
We'd live the life we choose
We'd fight and never lose
For we were young and sure to have our way.
La la la la...
Just tonight I stood before the tavern
Nothing seemed the way it used to be
In the glass I saw a strange reflection
Was that lonely woman really me
Those were the days my friend
We thought they'd never end
We'd sing and dance forever and a day
We'd live the life we choose
We'd fight and never lose
Those were the days, oh yes those were the days
La la la la... Through the door there came familiar laughter
I saw your face and heard you call my name
Oh my friend we're older but no wiser
For in our hearts the dreams are still the same
Those were the days my friend
We thought they'd never end
We'd sing and dance forever and a day
We'd live the life we choose
We'd fight and never lose
Those were the days, oh yes those were the days.
All the above is so I can write about my favourite hosta,
Hosta ‘Halcyon’. I wrote about its startling beginning in this blog. In it I
explain about never touching a blue hosta as your finger will remove the blue
coating called bloom.
But there are other etiquettes associated with hostas and
their possessive owners.
Don’t ever say to one of them, “When do you split your
hostas? Could I get a piece of it?’
To begin the nomenclature split is not correct when
dealing with hostas. They are divided.
Anybody who has seen a Hosta ‘Sieboldiana Elegans’ in a garden knowing
it has been there at least 10 years will understand the beauty of a large,
mature and undivided hosta.
There are a few smaller hostas like those of the Tiara
series that happily grow in pots and when they fill it they can be divided and
given to friends. I wish the American Hosta Society would consider emulating worldwide rose societies that have a denomination of roses called OGRs or Old Garden Roses. Unlike roses, hostas were not discovered really until this century and they became popular in the late 60s. Why not call those early hostas like Hosta 'Halcyon' OGHs?
Hosta people call hosta enthusiasts hostaholics. I
believe I may be one.
Rosemary's Interest In Little Things Botanical
Thursday, July 28, 2022
| Rosa 'Leander' 31 July 2022
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| Rosa 'Leander' & Coreopsis verticillata 'Zagreb' 31 July 2022
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It is a
given, particularly in this century that both grammar and botanical classification
is in flux.
Some 30
years ago the members of the American Hosta Society did not object that yuccas and
hostas were in the same family. Now they object, with no satisfaction that
hostas, yuccas and the agave (from where we get tequila) are part of the Asparagaceae
(asparagus!).
Because
my Rosemary was such a keen gardener who was very good with her botanical
nomenclature I knew that the photenia, a popular plant used as green hedge in
Vancouver is related to the rose family. What is the giveaway? The photenia has reddish leaves in the spring
that turn to green as the season progresses. Many roses (not all) have red
young leaves when they begin to grow in the spring.
Rosemary in
her penchant for details noticed the little things of plants. Some of this
talent of hers rubbed off. Today, 31 July 2022, (I have to explain that I am
filling holes for the entire month of June and July when I did not blog) I
noticed the beginning of what would have been a healthy stem that would have
resulted in a lovely Rosa ‘Leander’. Leander to Rosemary's Hero
This blog
like so many in these two years are all about Rosemary. Rosa ‘Leander’ was one
of her fave English Roses, particularly because it did well in our shady
Kerrisdale garden. When we moved it to Kits it died. A friend found one in a
garden about to be demolished it and gave it to us. In the pot wit Leander is
this very nice little yellow flowered flower with exceptional foliage.
And so I
dedicate this blog to the memory of my Rosemary who taught me so much including
noticing the small details.
Macro Economics
Wednesday, July 27, 2022
| Werner Herzog - 140mm lens - my two 140s with Rosemary's Crambe maritima 27 July 2022
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| Hosta 'Dorset Blue' 27 July 2022
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When I embarked as a magazine portrait photographer in Vancouver
I was aided by the fact that I had purchased in 1979, what was then deemed a new-fangled
camera, called a Mamiya RB-67. It used and uses (I have three of them) 120 film
(still being made) which was encased in a back that revolved its 6x7cm format
into vertical and horizontal. My photographs delighted art directors as my
verticals fit full page bleeds and the horizontals looked just fine as the two
page spreads that became the vogue in those days. Because I had many backs I shot both in b+w and colour giving those art directors more choices.
But most important for me was that I researched my subjects
and when I photographed them I never asked them to do something they did not
want to do. It was important to respect them. My Rosemary gave me breath mints and made sure I applied my Mitchum anti-perspiramt.
I believe I have the same approach to my plant scans (since 2001
and perhaps over 2000 of them). I respect my plants and I do my best to make
them look exactly as they are and sometimes a tad better. When I tell folks
that my plants talk to me, they laugh. But plants do communicate their need for
water or sun or shade.
This brings me to the topic at hand – the macro lens. Few
macro lenses are macro. Many are close-focusing lenses. A normal lens is sharp
at infinity and the image begins to deteriorate as you get close. A true macro is
sharp up close and the image begins to deteriorate as you focus to infinity.
There is one lens (there may be more) that is the exception.
This is my Mamiya 140mm lens with floating elements. I believe I may have purchased
my first one in 1981. The second one I bought when the first one had a shutter
main spring break. I had it fixed but from then on I always had to 140s and two
Mamiyas RB in my photo bag, just in case. | Hosta 'Dorset Blue' 27 July 2022
|
The macro setting of the 140mm lens enabled me to get close
to people’s faces for dramatic portraits. That is all I used my macro lens for.
It is now fashionable in this 21st century to use
close focusing or macro lenses (and even close focusing phones) to photograph
flowers, particularly roses.
What follows is my personal opinion on the subject.
I believe that it is important to respect the beauty of a
plant by showing it as if it were a portrait not as the detail of a nose, ear
or lip.
When I started scanning my roses in 2001 I made sure that
the scans were at 100% the size of the plant, that the colour was accurate and
I always noted the date.
I call my plant scans, scanographs and I am a scanographer.
I could add that I am a plant portrait scanographer.
And I might add (still a personal opinion) that all those
macro photos of flowers are kind of dull. | Hosta 'Dorset Blue' 27 July 2022
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The PNE Woodie Revisited
Tuesday, July 26, 2022
| June 1992 - Vancouver Magazine
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The PNE Roller Coaster
is back after a year long refurbishment.
It's the perfect time to bring back an @CBCOnTheCoast classic with @Lazin_Ryder
Enjoy!
cbc.ca ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
When I read the above today in Twitter I immediately went to
Google and put woodie, Alex Waterhouse-Hayward and got this blog. When I went
to my files, I looked for Roller Coaster –PNE and found the negatives that I
took sometime in June 1992 for the July issue of Vancouver Magazine. A copy of the magazine was there, too.
My photograph is not the usual one where you shoot behind
you, and you get the horrified look on people's faces.
Why did I take the picture in the opposite direction? I was told to.
I must give credit that in the 80s and 90s I worked lots for
many magazines including Vancouver Magazine. The art directors were good at
their job. The one for Vancouver Magazine in 1992 was Rick Staehling (deceased)
who had graduated from the prestigious Art Center in Los Angeles.
Art directors like him, and the one that followed, Chris Dahl
gave detailed instructions on how photographers or illustrators would deal with
their assignments.
I remember telling Staehling that I suffered from acute
motion sickness and I could not even go on a swing. He insisted that I had to
take a stomach churning shot of the roller coaster.
I did. That was 30 years ago and that world of good journalism
is gone. I could be smug about it and look down on photographers now. I try not
to, and now I hope that somehow they may find the mentors that I was lucky to have had, and
perhaps they may develop skills that go beyond the obvious. And only then will they
attain a style, all their own.
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