Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Eye on irises: 6 that do well locally

- Send questions, comments, and photos to joshua@ perfectpla­nts.com.

Whenever I indulge in guacamole made from a Hass avocado, I am reminded of its unlikely origin.

In 1926, Rudolph Hass, a mail carrier in Pasadena, planted three avocado seeds in his avocado grove in La Habra Heights. Only one of them grew into an acceptable seedling, upon which he made several attempts to graft the Fuerte variety. Fuerte is a smooth, green-skinned type that was the most popular commercial avocado of that time and is still sold.

Due to the graft failures, however, Hass was about to dispose of the seedling when an expert in tree grafting said the seedling was unusually robust and Hass should wait and see how it might develop. When the tree eventually did bear fruit, it was bumpy, of an unusual color and taste and so, once again, he expressed doubts about its value.

However, his children enjoyed the fruit and he was soon selling it to his colleagues in the post office and to gourmet chefs through a local grocery store, where the avocados fetched the incredible price of a dollar each, equivalent to $15 today. Although Hass owned the patent to the variety that bore his name, he made less than $5,000 from it since the cuttings he sold, as they matured into trees, were used as propagatio­n material — unprotecte­d by patent laws of the time — for large orchards.

I was reminded of this story when learning about the Snow Flurry iris from Rich Loehr, whose great aunt, Clara Rees, created it as a hybrid after transferri­ng pollen from a pink Thais iris onto the stigma of a white Purissima iris.

The fruit capsule that formed contained only two seeds. One of them was shriveled up and unviable, but the other grew into Snow Flurry, a white iris with a hint of blue and an unusually sweet fragrance. What made Snow Flurry special was its ruffled edges, a new innovation in iris characteri­stics.

Since then, thousands of tall bearded iris varieties owe their ruffled petals to Snow Flurry. Although Snow Flurry does not produce pollen, its female flowers are receptive to the pollen of other varieties and thus form capsules containing seeds of new hybrids. Unfortunat­ely for Rees, patents on irises had yet to be registered and, until today, patenting irises has only rarely been done due to the ease of iris propagatio­n, achieved by means of bulblike rhizomes, and the nearly impossible task of enforcing patent rights on these perennials.

Loehr wanted to know if Snow Flurry, a tall bearded iris, would grow in Indio, which is 75 miles east of Riverside in the Colorado Desert. Most irises tolerate desert heat, especially tall bearded irises, and freezing temperatur­es as well. If I were you, I would contact the Inland Iris Society, which is in Riverside and has a presence on Facebook.

There are 250 species of irises, most of them native to dry climates like our own. I have had personal experience with six species.

IRIS X GERMANICA AND RELATED HYBRIDS » This is the tall bearded iris or fleur-delis, with thousands of cultivars available in every color and combinatio­n of colors you could imagine. Most bloom briefly in late winter or spring, but some cultivars, known as remontants, will flower on and off in summer and fall as well. Flag irises are easy to grow and are as nonchalant about water as most California natives and cactuses. However, fertilizat­ion and some additional watering now and then will lead to more foliage and flowers, especially in the remontants. There are many Internet vendors with a wide variety of flag irises for sale.

IRIS DOUGLASIAN­A » The habitat of this California native, known as Pacific Coast iris, stretches from Santa Barbara to Oregon. In Southern California, Pacific Coast irises require some sun protection in order to thrive. There is a wonderful selection of them available at the Theodore Payne Foundation nursery in Sun Valley.

IRIS PSEUDACORU­S » Known as yellow flag iris, this is a species that, planted on the edge of a pond, will grow with weedy abandon. It is also suitable for planting in narrow, north-facing beds that are shielded from hot sun. Yellow flag iris grows taller, with foliage that is lusher, than other iris species listed here. I have seen this iris growing along the zigzag bridge in the Japanese garden at the Tillman Water Reclamatio­n Plant in Van Nuys.

IRIS CRISTATA » So-called crested irises grow in evergreen clumps in the shade. Plants reach no more than a foot tall. Flowers are typically white or lavender and fragrant, with golden crests on each sepal.

IRIS X HOLLANDICA » This is the classic Dutch iris, the one you see in van Gogh paintings. Colors of this bulbous iris vary, but the standard bearer is purple or royal blue with a strong blotch of yellow on each sepal.

IRIS FOETIDISSI­MA » This plant goes by the unromantic name of stinking iris, al-* luding to the odor emitted by its crushed foliage. Its ornamental feature, however, is not its flowers but its vivid, orange-red seeds, which, clustered at more than 20 per pod, create quite a stir when dozens of pods open simultaneo­usly on mature plants.

I would be remiss not to mention that there are dozens of flag iris cultivars with fragrant flowers, and they are widely available through Internet vendors, easily accessed with a search of “fragrant irises.”

Are there any unusual or especially stunning irises that you grow and would like to share with readers of this column? If so, feel free to write about your iris experience and send it to the email address given below.

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Two special, two-day weekend events are taking place at Sherman Library & Gardens in Corona del Mar. Saturday and March 19, the North American Clivia Society will present a two-day clivia (CLI-vee-ah) show and sale. Clivia is the only plant for the shade garden that flowers in glowing orange, although varieties with salmon, yellow, pink, red and white flowers are also available. On April 1-2, members of the Saddleback Valley Bromeliad Society will be exhibiting some of their specimens and offering many plants for sale. Bromeliads are a highly diverse group of plants with flowers in every color, often with textured and uniquely patterned or variegated foliage. The exquisite Sherman Gardens, although not large, are packed with gorgeous flowering specimens as well as exotic ferns and other foliage plants. The gardens are at 2647 E. Coast Highway in Corona del Mar. For more informatio­n, call 949-673-2261 or visitthesh­erman.org.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JOSHUA SISKIN ?? Cultivars of tall bearded Iris x germanica, left, are easy to grow and need little water, while Pacific Coast irises like this Canyon Snow are California natives and need some protection from the sun to thrive.
PHOTOS BY JOSHUA SISKIN Cultivars of tall bearded Iris x germanica, left, are easy to grow and need little water, while Pacific Coast irises like this Canyon Snow are California natives and need some protection from the sun to thrive.
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