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Red Rose Day

 

 

 

 

 

 

 By Jerelyn H. (I-F-Letty)

Roses mean romance and Valentine’s Day right?  So what am I doing writing about roses in June well… June 12th is Red Rose Day, a day to celebrate the queen of the garden.  So why June, you ask?  All roses in the northern hemisphere begin blooming in June.  All roses come from wild stock and the breeding of roses is an ancient practice.  Fossil evidence says the rose dates back 35 million years, and recorded cultivation of the rose began about 5000 years ago, roses have even been found in Egyptian tombs, and in the written records of Chinese Emperors.  Roses were not only valued for their beauty, but for the perfume that was extracted.  At one time rose oil was so sought after that it could be used as currency, but the plant has medicinal qualities as well.  Rosehips (the fruit of the rose) are high in vitamin C, and have been used in teas and tisanes for millennia. Old roses pre-hybridization; bloomed only once a year in late spring/early summer, and were nearly always pink.  The modern roses developed in Europe during the 18th and 19th centuries were imported from China these are the ones that were highly prized, for variation color, petal types, and long stems but most of all for blooming repeatedly.  There is now something like 30,000 varieties.

But Red Rose Day has a deeper meaning and it has come to symbolize the fight against Cystic Fibrosis.  Or as a little girl, I will call Carrie called it 65 Roses.  Why 65 roses?  Because, that is what Cystic Fibrosis sounded like to a little girl suffering from this genetic disease. My education about CF started one day in June nearly 20 years ago, I moved all my roses into a proper rose garden early that spring.  I had carefully prepared the site and after several years of collecting had a lovely variety of roses, I had moved them to their new home, and spent a great deal of time coddling them to make certain that moving  them had not damaged them. There was one rose I loved, and still love called:  “The Squire.”  It is the color of ruby red velvet.

Carrie’s grandfather happened to be our mailman (he had taken this route so he could take his lunch break at his daughter’s house and to be able to see his granddaughter every day.)  Denny the mailman was a kind person, at that time and too my thirty something self, I considered him to be an older gentleman; I suppose that he was a bit older than I am now. He would always remark on my gardens, for he too was a gardener, and I was just studying to become a Master Gardener, my yard was my studio, as well as my laboratory, Denny understood my passion for gardening.

One day he asked if he could bring his granddaughter over to see the roses, as she lived around the corner and she often walked by, of course I agreed.  Several days later they came by and to my surprise Carrie was a girl I recognized, I had seen her at my kid’s school, and running around with the kids in the neighborhood, she was a several years older than my daughters, but was as small as my eldest.  Well after about 10 minutes Denny had to get back to work but Carrie stayed to talk to me about the roses.  She smelled them all, and I named them for her, and at last I asked her which one she liked best she went to “The Squire” I like this one best she said,  so I cut off  3 blooms and wrapped the stems in wet paper towel, so she could take  them home.  That is when she said to me and I will never forget it. “You know that I have 65 roses?”  I know she must have seen my puzzlement, because she continued on.  “It is really called Cystic Fibrosis, it is a disease that affects the lungs that is why I get to come home from school every day for lunch and lots of time I can’t go back, because of my treatments.”  I knew so little about what “the treatments” entailed; but when I asked, she told me very matter of factly, that her mother had to beat on her chest and back to break up the congestion there.  At that time there was a new machine that would do it, but she had yet to get one.   She had to inhale medicine through a nebulizer; even now I cannot do justice to the description of what she had to endure.  “I hope to grow old she told me, kids like me they don’t get old, we die young and that is why I don’t have any brothers or sisters, because they could be born with it too and Mom and Dad don’t think it is fair.”  But if I get older I want to grow roses too.  That “if” affected me deeply “if I get older.”

Over that summer she came to visit quite often, and then she moved onto middle school, our visits came less and less often.  Denny retired several years’ later, life went on.  Nine years later I was walking down her street and noticed the moving van, in front of their house.  Carries father was putting things in his truck so I went over and introduced myself; I asked him how Denny was and about Carrie.    Carrie would have been 20 and I feared his answer.  To my relief he said that she had married 3 years ago, he said she was living in Portland Oregon, and that he and his wife where relocating there as well, after wishing them happy trails, I continued on with my walk.  Married at 17 what were they thinking? Then it hit me, “we die young” she had said.  So she was going to experience life in what time she had. Why not love and marriage?  I was happy for her, and that she was making a life for herself in spite of the uncertainty of her future.

So Red Rose Day can mean many things, roses symbolize passionate love; they symbolize hope, and remembrance.  Roses are still the favorite flowers for brides, and June is still a favorite bridal month. But every time I see a red rose I think of “The Squire” and of Carrie and I hope that she is still on this earth and that she has a rose garden, and I hear. “You know I have 65 roses?”

 

For more about CF go here: http://www.cff.org/

For the short history of the rose and its interesting road to domination, go here: http://www.ecbdflowerstore.com/108091.php
Disclaimer:
I have no affiliation with this web site, I just thought their history on roses was the most interesting and concise.

 


SixtyFive Roses: A Sister’s Memoir by Heather Summerhayes Cariou

 


The Sunne in Splendour by Sharon Kay Penman

 


The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red by Ridley Pearson

Snow White and Rose Red by Patricia C Wrede

 


Red Red Rose
by C Rowe-Myers

 


Blood Red Rose
by Maxwell Grant

 


Snow White & Rose Red
by Ed McBain

 


The Red Rose Box by Brenda Woods


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8 Responses to “Red Rose Day”

  1. Lianna T. (Li-li) , says:

    Thank you for sharing. Your post was very moving.

  2. Rick (RickMatt) says:

    Wow Jerelyn, that was an amazing post. Thank you for sharing this with us.

  3. Linda (Angeleyes) , says:

    What a wonderful story. Thanks so much for sharing Jerelyn. I’m not sure I’ll every look at a rose the same way again.

  4. Gail P. (TinkerPirate) Montara, CA says:

    Thank you so much for sharing your story! I, too, and a rose grower…well, I’ll be one again when we move to Oregon. I finally gave up several years ago when gophers ate the roots to ALL my rose bushes over the winter…damn gophers. Anyway, I will remember your story when I lovingly tend to them.

  5. Carole (craftnut) says:

    What a thought provoking, wonderful story. Thank you, Jerelyn, for sharing it.

  6. Bonnie (LoveNE) , says:

    Stop making me cry on a perfectly good day! Nice story, I lost a friend to CF when we were 13 and she was considered lucky to have made it that far. So glad the treatments have improved!

  7. Dear Jerelyn,

    Thank you so much for posting this wonderful story. Unfortunately, my family and I know it all too well. You see, my nephew, John-John has Cystic Fibrosis. For the past 18 years, since he was diagnosed, my family has participated in numerous fund raisers and charity events to combat this terrible disease.

    We even attend a black-tie event every year here in Atlanta appropriately called 65 Roses. My nephew was the guest of honor last year at the dinner. There was not a dry eye in the room as he reflected on his own personal struggles, on his experiences, challenges and his positive outlook on life. He is quite the young man now and is now at the University of Georgia. We hope and pray for a long and generous life for him.

    As we go through the trials and tribulations of dealing with the ups and downs of CF, it is comforting to know that others share in our struggles. Your story was wonderful and heartfelt. Thank you. Thank you so much for sharing. Thank you for having the courage to speak your heart and let others know how you feel. And most of all, thank you for reminding all of us how precious life truly is.

    May God Bless each and every one of these kids.

    My best regards,

    Richard Pickering
    Proud Uncle of a brave young man,
    my nephew John-John in his fight against CF
    and
    Founder & President of PaperBackSwap.com

  8. Jerelyn H. (I-F-Letty) says:

    Thank you all. I never know when writing these things how they will be received and this one in particular was hard for me to submit, I just didn’t know if it was too personal. But this girl really touch my soul and I hope that I did her story justice.

    Thank you Richard for sharing about your nephew. This community at PBS is my second home and I am aways happy to get to know more about the people here.

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