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Sep 16, 2015 12:38 PM CST
Name: Mary Ann
Western Kentucky (Zone 7a)
Bee Lover Irises Hummingbirder Hostas Keeps Horses Farmer
Daylilies I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Container Gardener Cat Lover Region: Kentucky Birds
Sherry said: "The first Iris I planted was blue. It may have had a name, but I was going for color at the time"

Mmmmmm -- I still am, Sherry -- I still am. Hilarious!
Thoughts become things -- choose the good ones. (www.tut.com)
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Sep 16, 2015 12:58 PM CST
Name: Jan Wax
Mendocino County, N. CA (Zone 9a)
I'm a semi-retired studio potter.
Irises Hummingbirder Hellebores Organic Gardener Dog Lover Daylilies
Region: Ukraine Region: California Dahlias Garden Art Cat Lover Vegetable Grower
You were seduced by irises, Sherry! As was I.
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Sep 16, 2015 2:16 PM CST
Name: Leslie
Durham, NC (Zone 8a)
Garden Photography Cat Lover Irises Region: North Carolina Peonies Enjoys or suffers hot summers
Celebrating Gardening: 2015
Sherry had a very gifted enabler too in Joe!! Or I should say "has"!
"The chimera is a one time happenstance event where the plant has a senior moment and forgets what it is doing." - Paul Black
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Sep 16, 2015 2:46 PM CST
Name: Sherry Austin
Santa Cruz, CA (Zone 9a)
Birds Bulbs Region: California Dragonflies Foliage Fan Irises
Keeper of Poultry Roses Photo Contest Winner: 2015
I have a lot of enablers! When we were at the dig for our sale, folks kept asking if I had this or that and kept handing me rhizomes. My cottage next door is rented to a couple in our club, and they were thinning out their "herd" and told me I needed this one and that.. Hard to turn down Iris, I must say... Hilarious!
The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that it has never tried to contact us.
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Sep 16, 2015 5:14 PM CST
Name: Richard
Joshua Tree (Zone 9a)
Birds Herbs Irises Ponds Plant and/or Seed Trader
Sherry, It can be hard to turn down irises. My earliest memory of irises were having them in the yard. My mother planted them shortly after we had moved into the house back in January 1976 (have to go by what they said as I turned two that month). I always can recall having them in the yard even before starting elementary. We always grew veggies and such. I remember my mom could get a plant from someone that was basically dead and before you knew it had all kinds of new growth. Within a few weeks it looked like a new plant on steroids. I don't have the same green thumb that she had , but I do my best. I would love to do more on the yard then funds would allow and make it my household own someday.
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Sep 17, 2015 1:18 AM CST
Name: Sherry Austin
Santa Cruz, CA (Zone 9a)
Birds Bulbs Region: California Dragonflies Foliage Fan Irises
Keeper of Poultry Roses Photo Contest Winner: 2015
Well, the nice thing about gardening is that you can appreciate the beauty of a flower without going into debt.
The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that it has never tried to contact us.
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Sep 17, 2015 6:55 AM CST
Name: Arlyn
Whiteside County, Illinois (Zone 5a)
Beekeeper Region: Illinois Irises Celebrating Gardening: 2015
Well, unless your addiction out grows the available space...and you start buying more ground....and then you fill THAT up, and......I can see where a person COULD be in debt Sticking tongue out !
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Sep 17, 2015 7:57 AM CST
Name: Linnea
Southern Maine, border 5b/6a (Zone 5b)
Composter Daylilies Garden Art Irises Organic Gardener Permaculture
Plant and/or Seed Trader Winter Sowing
If I need more land, I will have to become the church gardener....ummmm, I can walk to 3 churches. Rolling on the floor laughing
Don't make fear based decisions.
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Sep 17, 2015 8:06 AM CST
Name: Mary Ann
Western Kentucky (Zone 7a)
Bee Lover Irises Hummingbirder Hostas Keeps Horses Farmer
Daylilies I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Container Gardener Cat Lover Region: Kentucky Birds
Thumbs up Big Grin
Thoughts become things -- choose the good ones. (www.tut.com)
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Sep 17, 2015 11:42 AM CST
Name: Cleta
Idaho Falls Idaho (Zone 4a)
Irises Lilies Region: Idaho
Your posts got me to thinking. I remember smelling the iris that bordered my grandmother's yard, but did not think too much about them, other than they were pretty. Then as a mid-teen, I remember my mother's patch of iris, a wild mess on the edge of our home in Carmichael, California. Again, pretty flowers, but not much more than that. Fast track through college and marriage and buying our first home. I wanted iris to border the front yard, and as luck would have it we were planning two trips to Idaho that year, one in the spring and one in the fall to attend a cousin's wedding. When we arrived at my grandmother's, I asked her if I could have some of her iris that fall. She and her sister had been buying varieties for years, sharing and expanding the garden from my childhood. Grandma gave her assent and handed me a bunch of torn fabric to mark the ones I wanted. I guess she didn't notice her garden for several days, but when we arrived home, she called me, laughter in her voice. "My iris look like they all have sore throats. They ALL have ties around the stems." I guess I had marked more than she had expected, but in the fall she graciously helped me dig up those many iris, all NOIDs to me, pack them in cardboard boxes and we headed back to California with my loot. They soon graced the border of our new home, delighting me in their beauty and my remembrances of Grandma. When we moved a couple of years later, I put into the sales contract that I could take half of each clump of iris to our new home. Again, those iris bordered my yard. I moved, divided, shared and enjoyed those rhizomes for years, coloring friends' yards and enhancing the beauty of Tehachapi, Ca where we lived for 35 years. Then five years before we planned on retiring, I ordered 20 iris from Cooley's Iris, planning on letting them grow and develop so that I could divide them and take some with us to Idaho. Again, I put in the sales contract that half of the iris went with me to our 'temporary' home in Idaho. We had bought a starter house, planned to live in it for two years and then move to a custom house we would build outside of town. Again, the sales contract stipulated I could take the iris with me. I dug them up in October, placed them in the cold storage area under the porch of our unfinished house, and moved in February. A cold spring meant delaying planting and moving meant ignoring the iris. When I went down to plant them, half of them had molded. I had moved ten milk crates filled with labeled rhizomes and half of them were destroyed. I planted only a portion of the iris I had been babying for seven years. I was left with NOIDs from Grandma, and the following: Afternoon Delight, Before the Storm, Colortart, Competitive Edge, Fanfaron, Forge Fire, Panama Fling, Pink Froth, P. T. Barnum, Ruffled Ballet, Subtle Hint, Sweeter than Wine, Taco Supreme and Violet Rings. Writing down this list made me realize that I really only lost 6 named varieties, but many of my clumps were greatly diminished from 10-12 rhizomes down to 2-3 or sadly, 1. We had lived in this house for 4 years when some neighboring iris began to beckon, and I asked for the opportunity to trade, adding more NOIDs to my garden. Then last year I acquired 15 more clumps of more recent iris from a friend, which led me on the search to identify them. Then this year I actually bought two iris from the local nurseries, Tall Cool One and Florentine Silk. About that same time, I encountered ATP in my endeavors to identify two of the fifteen NOIDs that had bloomed this spring. Then you all know the story from there. With awesome 'iris for postage' from generous members I tripled my varieties. As I was digging more spaces, My Final Frontier for 2015, this summer in anticipation of receiving the postage iris, I often wondered about my grandmother. I know she notices my care of her babies, given to me over 40 years ago, and realizes she is responsible for my love of iris, my endeavors at expansion and my appreciation of their beauty as I wander through my garden each spring, talking to each bloom, calling it by name, and urging it on to its fulfilling gorgeousness. Thanks you, Susan Eva Hurd of Elba Idaho.
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Sep 18, 2015 8:10 AM CST
Name: Leslie
Durham, NC (Zone 8a)
Garden Photography Cat Lover Irises Region: North Carolina Peonies Enjoys or suffers hot summers
Celebrating Gardening: 2015
Lovely story of your iris Cleta!
"The chimera is a one time happenstance event where the plant has a senior moment and forgets what it is doing." - Paul Black
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Sep 19, 2015 12:10 AM CST
Name: Sherry Austin
Santa Cruz, CA (Zone 9a)
Birds Bulbs Region: California Dragonflies Foliage Fan Irises
Keeper of Poultry Roses Photo Contest Winner: 2015
What a great story!

Do you happen to remember any of the names of the 6 that were lost? Might be some of us could help Smiling
The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that it has never tried to contact us.
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Sep 19, 2015 6:16 AM CST
Name: Mary Ann
Western Kentucky (Zone 7a)
Bee Lover Irises Hummingbirder Hostas Keeps Horses Farmer
Daylilies I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Container Gardener Cat Lover Region: Kentucky Birds
I enjoyed the story too. Is Grandma Hurd still alive?
Thoughts become things -- choose the good ones. (www.tut.com)
Last edited by Muddymitts Sep 19, 2015 6:16 AM Icon for preview
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Sep 19, 2015 4:00 PM CST
Name: Cleta
Idaho Falls Idaho (Zone 4a)
Irises Lilies Region: Idaho
Henhouse said:What a great story!

Do you happen to remember any of the names of the 6 that were lost? Might be some of us could help Smiling


Thanks for the idea. I lost After the Dawn, Edna's Wish, Mountain Melody (which Pam replaced this summer,) La Valse, Test Pattern, and Spring Tidings, as well as many of the NOIDs from my grandmother, who died in 1986. Sad Thank you for your warm thoughts. It seems odd sometimes to remember my grandmother and focus on those memories and realize that now I am the grandmother. Time passes too swiftly, especially when you become aware of time as a transient thing.
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Sep 20, 2015 1:22 AM CST
Name: Mary Ann
Western Kentucky (Zone 7a)
Bee Lover Irises Hummingbirder Hostas Keeps Horses Farmer
Daylilies I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Container Gardener Cat Lover Region: Kentucky Birds
Boy -- I can't help with a single one of those. Sad

But I sure hear ya on the aging thing................. Glare
Thoughts become things -- choose the good ones. (www.tut.com)
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Sep 20, 2015 5:10 AM CST
Name: Tom
Southern Wisconsin (Zone 5b)
Butterflies Vegetable Grower Keeper of Poultry Irises Keeps Horses Dog Lover
Daylilies Cat Lover Region: Wisconsin Celebrating Gardening: 2015
Some very nice stories of your first iris purchases. I rented for many years, and had a long commute for 13 years. Gardening usually meant throwing in a few annuals in front of the house, along with a vegetable garden. When I bought this place in 1995, it had a few annuals in the garden in front of the house. About a year or two later, not sure now, I was at a garden center to pick up some annuals. I ran across a black iris in a pot that was in bloom. I thought that was nice, and so bought it and planted it in my flower garden in front of the house. It bloomed the next year too, then it died, so I thought. A couple of years later it came back and bloomed again, only now it was dark purple. Hmmmmm. I thought it had reverted or something. Now I figure it must have seeded a seedling, and that became my purple seedling. A year or two after that, I saw a rusty red one and bought it too. Of course it had a name, but I didn't get concerned about that. That one became my "famous" red NOID. Those were the only two Irises I had until I retired in. Later I saw Rare Treat blooming in a pot at anther garden center and liked it, so bought that one. I did keep the tag for that and kept it's name. I acquired Liaison the same way. A friend took me along to visit an iris garden in Illinois. The name of the place is Hornbachers. They had lots of other plants too, but the iris field was in bloom. I ordered $120. worth of rhizomes to be shipped later. When I got them I had prepared a new bed for them. Most of them were tiny little things smaller then my pinky, but I didn't know any better, thinking that's just how they came. It took most of them two years to bloom, and some as much as 4 years. I did an internet search for irises, and came across Schreiner's. I think I made two orders that year. One from the first catalog, and another from their sales catalog. The rest is history.
Thumb of 2015-09-20/tveguy3/a570ba
Here's a picture of Rare treat, the purple seedling, and Liaison taken back when they were 3 of the 4 I had. The Red NOID would have been left of them a ways, and didn't get into the picture. Notice the nice mulch around them !!!! Rolling on the floor laughing
Politicians are like diapers, they need to be changed often, and for the same reason.
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Sep 20, 2015 6:47 AM CST
Name: Leslie
Durham, NC (Zone 8a)
Garden Photography Cat Lover Irises Region: North Carolina Peonies Enjoys or suffers hot summers
Celebrating Gardening: 2015
Mulch is part of the learning curve Tom! Bet many of us used it. You have obviously learned much more since you are now the Grand Cheesehead of our group. It is nice to know you have had the Red NOid so long. Do you still have the others too?
"The chimera is a one time happenstance event where the plant has a senior moment and forgets what it is doing." - Paul Black
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Sep 20, 2015 6:54 AM CST
Name: Mary Ann
Western Kentucky (Zone 7a)
Bee Lover Irises Hummingbirder Hostas Keeps Horses Farmer
Daylilies I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Container Gardener Cat Lover Region: Kentucky Birds
Tom -- I didn't realize that I have two of your first three Irises -- Famous Red and Purple Seedling!! I think that's cool!!

I don't think I've ever seen Liaison before -- what a pretty Iris. Thumbs up
Thoughts become things -- choose the good ones. (www.tut.com)
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Sep 20, 2015 6:59 AM CST
Name: Debra
Garland, TX (NE Dallas suburb) (Zone 8a)
Rescue dogs: Angels with paws needi
Dragonflies Dog Lover Bookworm I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Garden Photography Bee Lover
Plays in the sandbox Butterflies Region: Texas Garden Sages I sent a postcard to Randy! Charter ATP Member
Tom, didn't you identify the Famous Red this year as Dynamite? Or am I confused again... Sticking tongue out
It’s okay to not know all the answers.
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Sep 20, 2015 7:10 AM CST
Name: Mary Ann
Western Kentucky (Zone 7a)
Bee Lover Irises Hummingbirder Hostas Keeps Horses Farmer
Daylilies I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Container Gardener Cat Lover Region: Kentucky Birds
I think that Dynamite was offered as a possible identity -- but Arlyn (I believe) pointed out discrepancies. If I remember correctly............
Thoughts become things -- choose the good ones. (www.tut.com)

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