Seed Your Future announces winners of plant drawing contest - Nursery Management

2022-06-25 17:06:38 By :

The contest encourages middle schoolers nationwide to consider the characteristics of two existing plants to create a plant mash-up with new qualities that could help their community.

Seed Your Future’s fifth annual plant drawing contest captured the imaginations of a record 6,050 children — a 36% increase from 2021 — opening their eyes to the possibilities of plants and a potential career path.

Seed Your Future and Scholastic’s Plant Mash-Up contest encourages middle schoolers nationwide to consider the characteristics of two existing plants to create a plant mash-up with new qualities that could help their community.

The Plant Mash-Up is more than a contest for a monetary prize; it offers children three ways to tackle larger societal problems that don’t have clear or easy answers, says Jazmin Albarran, executive director of Seed Your Future, the Society of American Florists’ partner to help build the floriculture and horticulture labor pipeline.

“One, it allows them to express their own creativity and show that they have the potential to be a problem solver,” she says. “Two, that they can then impact their community, their backyards, their families, their school, their environment. Three, they can do it through plants.

“That’s the whole thing. We want to get young people excited about coming into careers working with flowers and plants, and what better [way to do that] than using plants to solve issues in their own community.”

This year’s first place winner is Chloe Grace N., an eighth-grader from New Castle, Indiana. She combined an aloe vera plant and a burgundy rubber tree to address air pollution and promote wound healing. “The leaves of the hybrid tree are aloe leaves, which produce useful antioxidants for improved health, and have powerful health remedies that accelerate wound healing, as well as fighting off dangerous bacteria,” she wrote in her entry.

This year’s runner-up is Anna K., an eighth-grader from Shawnee, Kansas. She combined a silver maple and a breadfruit tree to address the problem of food deserts and malnutrition. “If these two could be combined, low-income citizens could have access to nutritious food from a tree that grows everywhere in the U.S. already,” she wrote in her entry.

This year’s sweepstake winner is Itais E., a sixth-grader from New Albany, Ohio, who combined a snake plant with an areca palm to address air pollution.

As Albarran reviewed the entries, she noticed mature themes mental health, shelter, erosion, air pollution, climate change, hydration, world hunger and diseases such as malaria.

“It was incredible to see the different topics that this contest can touch,” she says.

This contest is designed to get children thinking about plants at a critical age that could have a lifelong impact.  Seed Your Future’s research has found that middle school is when children are starting to think about what they want to do when they grow up. In many states, middle schoolers are deciding what high school they want to attend based on their interests, such as a performing arts school.

“You can play a part in reaching young people and reaching the next generation of professionals simply by putting this contest in front of as many middle schoolers in your area as possible,” she says. “I want to see 50,000 kids participating in this event next year.”

The Plant Mash-Up is but one way to introduce children to a possible career in flowers and plants, and there are plenty of other ways to get them involved the rest of the year. For example, a florist could invite a local Boy Scout Troop or Girl Scout Troop for a field visit, Albarran says. The florist could then use resources from Seed Your Future or come up with a hands-on activity for the children, such as arranging a bouquet for their moms.

“I want people to see our resources as a gateway to starting a relationship with the local school, the local YMCA…and every organization that is serving youth in outdoor spaces,” Albarran says. “Reach out to these people and say, ‘Do you know about Seed Your Future? Here are some cool videos, and if you ever want, you can come on site and learn more about different [career] roles.’”

And if the prospect of helping to find the next generation of workers for the floriculture and horticulture industries sounds daunting, it doesn’t have to be — and industry professionals don’t have to do it alone. Albarran emphasizes the importance of relationship building to help address labor shortages.

Albarran suggests that floral business can seek out other floral professionals, community organizations and partners such as Seed Your Future to help teach children about careers with flowers and plants. Working together makes the task more manageable, she says, and those partnerships can focus on finding two or three area schools or organizations to build relationships with.

She also wants to be sure that industry professionals know they have a partner in Seed Your Future.

“I always want the industry to know that they play a role in this and they have allies in Seed Your Future,” Albarran says. “They can volunteer with us, whether it’s through sharing our resources or volunteering and building relationships. And together, we can reach out to schools in their neighborhood.”

For more information, visit seedyourfuture.org and SAFNow.org    

The shrub rose earned Local Artist awards in three regions.

Already the recipient of 10 awards overseas, Proven Winners ColorChoice Oso Easy Double Red rose is making news this spring, earning important U.S. regional awards.

The American Rose Trials for Sustainability (A.R.T.S.) recently announced trial results for the 2023 season and Oso Easy Double Red landscape rose has earned Local Artist Awards in three regions.

Bred by Alain Meilland and introduced by Spring Meadow Nursery, Proven Winners ColorChoice Oso Easy Double Red shrub rose offers bright red, doubled blooms that are self-cleaning and appear continuously on the plant without deadheading. Glossy, deep green foliage stays free of black spot and powdery mildew. Oso Easy Double Red  rose grows to full, mounded, 3 to 4 feet tall/wide shrub, and is hardy down to USDA Zone 4.

Nursery Management magazine announced the results of the A.R.T.S. trials to the public in its article titled “Regionally resilient roses” where its states, “To win, roses must prove they are resilient on their own merits, without being buffered with repeated fertilizer applications or chemical sprays. A.R.T.S. helps you identify which roses have real-world resilience in your region to meet the high expectations of your customers.”

The A.R.T.S. adjudicators identify which roses are the most pest-resistant, drought-tolerant, low maintenance, vigorous and beautiful in each region. In order for a cultivar to be awarded an A.R.T.S. Local Artist award, they must perform equal to or better than the industry standards.

One judge commented that Oso Easy Double Red rose was the “Best rose in the block.” Other judges’ comments included, “Loaded with flower buds. Winner of the day; big and beautiful. Little disease and insect damage. Gorgeous plant. A winner on flower color and size.”

A.R.T.S. uses the Köppen climate system to delineate rose evaluation regions, as it accounts for both temperature and precipitation levels. Oso Easy Double Red  rose performed exceptionally well in an impressive three zones the CFA (humid subtropical), CSA (Mediterranean), and DFB (Humid continental, cool summer) regions.

Theia fungicide delivers broad-spectrum foliar and soil disease control for high-value crops.

AgBiome, Inc., a leader in developing innovative products from the earth’s microbial communities, announced that their newest product, Theia fungicide, has received approval from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Theia fungicide, developed through AgBiome’s GENESIS platform, is the second proprietary AgBiome crop protection product to be marketed.

“Today, we are one step closer to bringing growers of high-value crops yet another extremely effective disease management tool,” said Dr. Toni Bucci, chief operating officer for AgBiome. “This registration and impending commercial launch are proof of AgBiome’s ability to fulfill our promise of innovating to enhance the global agricultural ecosystem.”

Theia fungicide delivers broad-spectrum foliar and soil disease control through multiple modes of action, including fungicidal and bactericidal metabolites, and is OMRI Listed. With excellent control on diseases such as powdery mildew and Fusarium that have the power to devastate high-value fruit and vegetable crops, Theia fungicide is poised to become an important disease control solution for growers.

State registrations are now pending and growers can expect Theia fungicide to be available for purchase through AgBiome’s retail partners later this year. 

Black Hat and Dandy Man Color Wheel were recognized by the American Rhododendron Society.

The American Rhododendron Society has released the results of its 2022 Rhododendron of the Year Awards and two Proven Winners ColorChoice cultivars have earned regional awards.

The committee selects rhododendrons for adaptability in eight regions of the United States and Canada. The site states, “To be selected for a Rhododendron of the Year award a plant must have excellent foliage and flowers, have an attractive plant habit, be pest and disease resistant, and be cold hardy for the region.”

Proven Winners ColorChoice Black Hat and Dandy Man Color Wheel rhododendrons were named Rhododendron of the Year for the South Central region. For each region, the Plant Award Committee chooses an elepidote and a lepidote rhododendron, a deciduous azalea, and an evergreen azalea.

Black Hat rhododendron is a lepidote species, generally noted for small foliage with scale-like structures on the undersides of the leaves. Bred by Dr. Tom Ranney at North Carolina State University, Black Hat rhododendron is a triploid, making the flowers longer lasting than conventional selections. This rhododendron has thick, dark, evergreen foliage that takes on dramatic purple-black tones in cool weather. 

Also bred by Dr. Ranney, Dandy Man Color Wheel rhododendron is elepidote, with the large leaf size that typically comes to mind when referencing rhododendrons. They are called elepidote because they lack the scale-like structures on the undersides of the leaves. Dandy Man Color Wheel rhododendron has ruffled pink blooms that transition to crisp white, creating the effect of three different colors blooming at once. Handsome evergreen foliage, excellent disease resistance, and heat tolerance make this NCSU hybrid an adaptable, widely usable broadleaf evergreen.

The American Rhododendron Society is a non-profit organization designed to encourage interest in and provide information about the genus rhododendron. Society activities include public education, plant sales, flower shows, seed exchanges, and scientific research. More information about the American Rhododendron Society can be found here. The entire line of Proven Winners ColorChoice rhododendrons are readily available by contacting an account manager from Spring Meadow Nursery, a local wholesaler, and by visiting ProvenWinners-Shrubs.com and SpringMeadowNursery.com.

Rose comes to the marketing team from Bioworks R&D department.

Chris Rose has been named product manager at BioWorks. In his new position, Rose will be increasing BioWorks’ ability to launch new products and services to better serve existing and new core customers in all markets.

Rose joins the BioWorks marketing department from Research & Development, where he was actively involved in leading a team to perform product testing, development and commercialization. His experience in project management, coaching team members and consistently improving BioWorks’ commercialization process will serve him well in this new role.

“Chris is a great addition to the marketing team.” said Joe Lara, director of marketing. “His R&D experience, leadership qualities and execution mindset will help to expand and drive the BioWorks product portfolio into existing and new markets for the benefit of our customers now, and into the future.”