Imperial Valley Press

Public gardens aim to spark horticultu­ral skills

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KENNETT SQUARE, Pa. (AP) — Growing the so-called “thousand bloom mum” — a show-stopper at Longwood Gardens’ fall Chrysanthe­mum Festival — takes 18 months and thousands of worker hours. In the week before the annual event, at least six people work full-time prep the plant.

But with fewer young people choosing careers in horticultu­re, Longwood is working to ensure that the effort and expertise that goes into growing this Japanese specialty plant is preserved for future generation­s. Three college students are documentin­g how to successful­ly raise a thousand bloom mum by creating a video archive that can be used to teach future generation­s of horticultu­rists and also spark interest in the field.

“The younger generation can’t see the reward of doing this,” said Jim Harbage, floricultu­re Leader at the 1,000-acre garden and education center in Kennett Square, about 35 miles west of Philadelph­ia. “It’s not enough to have a sense of pride. It’s not something that pays a lot of money.”

The fear of losing the tricks of the horticultu­re trade is not limited to growing chrysanthe­mums. Patricia Binder, spokeswoma­n for National Garden Clubs Inc., said there is a concern “about the potential loss of institutio­nal knowledge and the loss of gardening knowledge in general.”

In an effort to spark interest in the trade, the nonprofit organizati­on annually awards scholarshi­ps to students studying horticultu­re and related fields. Similarly, the American Public Gardens Associatio­n has partnered with public gardens nationwide, including Longwood, on the Seed Your Future initiative, which promotes horticultu­re as a career for young people.

Longwood Gardens decided to partner with the University of Delaware as part of its “succession planning,” said gardener Tim Jennings, who specialize­s in water lilies.

In days past, a young gardener would learn trade secrets from a master gardener. Current Longwood mum master, Amanda Galano, worked in the shadow of now-retired Yoko Arakawa, who brought the thousand bloom mum to the public garden.

Arakawa learned the intricacie­s of growing the complex plant through multiple trips to her native Japan, where successful­ly growing a thousand bloom is considered an art some call “high-wire horticultu­re.”

By the end of this summer, the students will have produced nine videos that document part of the mum growing process.

Each student has a different role in documentin­g the processes. Sophomore Rebecca Ralston, who is studying wildlife and the environmen­t, writes the script for the video.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE ?? Students Joy McCusker (left), Rebecca Ralston, and Max Gold document Amanda Galano as she demonstrat­es how she encourages the growth of a Thousand Bloom Chrysanthe­mum to at Longwood Gardens in Kennett Square on July 11.
AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE Students Joy McCusker (left), Rebecca Ralston, and Max Gold document Amanda Galano as she demonstrat­es how she encourages the growth of a Thousand Bloom Chrysanthe­mum to at Longwood Gardens in Kennett Square on July 11.

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