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A Tribute to
My
Mentor
by
Michael Lockatell
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It is hard to imagine spring iris bloom
without Lloyd Zurbrigg. His tutelage over the past five plus years has enabled
me to develop a love for growing, creating and evaluating siberian and bearded
irises for the perennial garden.
My late mother’s favorite garden plants were irises and herbaceous peonies.
Thanks to plantings at my aunt and uncle’s home and the guidance of long time
growers Ethelene and Charles Gray, the attention of this landscape professional
began to focus on bearded irises. The Grays’ display gardens at their home in
my hometown of
Montvale,
N.J.
were chock full of the best spring blooming tall bearded selections on the iris
scene. My new interest in these hardy perennials finally resulted in the
establishment of drifts of these eye catching plants in front yard beds at my
parents new home in Richmond, Virginia.
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| Amain |
Anew |
Baby Blessed |
Brother Carl |
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| Clarence |
Cross Stitch |
Earl of Essex |
Earl of Leicester |
After coming to
Richmond
in 1996, I eventually joined the local chapter of the American Iris Society.
Carolyn and I attended the AIS Region 4 Spring Meeting in
Towson,
Maryland
in 1998. Aussie breeder Barry Blyth was the headline speaker at that event, but
we always remember a tall and handsome gentleman on the two day tour surveying
irises at each garden stop wearing his signature white safari hat.
Our next encounter with Lloyd would be back in
Richmond. He gave a program at a CVIS winter meeting on the latest developments in his
various breeding lines. He showed two slide trays worth of interesting
seedlings, so Carolyn and I decided to come to
Durham, N. C. to see his garden in spring bloom. It was an overwhelming experience for
two first time visitors. We saw row after row of predominantly white blooms with
various shadings of yellow on the fall shoulders thanks to the constant use of
Mesmerizer, Renown and Sunny Shoulders. After a few hours of his patient
reciting of seedling numbers and parentages from his black ringed stud book, our
heads were literally spinning!! It would take me a few years to easily recognize
the parents and merits for instance of 0026, 0032C, 0033 and Masterwork.
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English Cottage
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Frances Iva
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Garden Club
Delight |
Garden Grace
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Gladiatrix
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Goliath's Mate
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Hallowed
Thought |
Harvest of
Memories |
The coming of the new millennium soon
transformed a casual association into a close friendship centered on the further
development of his legendary breeding lines. We finally convinced Lloyd to visit
my garden in spring 02. Carolyn picked him up at the train station, and his
initial reaction to seeing the garden was priceless. “I never expected
anything like this!!” It was a joy of a lifetime having him walk through each
iris row with me. We evaluated my first crop of seedlings and countless named
varieties. He was interviewed by a local newspaper reporter and watched proudly
as a film crew taped a segment for my appearance on a local public television
gardening show. Doc adorned in a iris apron and armed with a pair of tweezers
and a box of pollen envelopes from seedlings and named varieties growing in his
own garden, he had the rare luxury of having two bloom seasons to make crosses.
Plans began in earnest to bring some of his older seedlings from
Durham
to
Richmond
for evaluation and further breeding.
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| I Do |
I Spy |
Immortality |
Jean Guymer |
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| Jennifer Rebecca |
Lady Essex |
Latest Style |
Lightly Seasoned |
We would share two more springs together evaluating old and new seedlings,
making crosses and looking for new ideas to try in the future. Carolyn and I
cherished the time Lloyd spent with us each spring. We finally decided to have
the living room piano tuned before his 04 visits. We shared memorable moments of
music and song each night before dinner. The sheet music for a song composed by
one of wife Nita’s music students, still resides on the music holder waiting
for Doc to play it on his next visit.
My second crop of seedlings bloomed for the
first time this past spring and fall. The best ones for rebloom featured
Zurbrigg breeding lines as part of the parentages. Spring flowering saw
unseasonably hot temperatures, but he nonetheless spent equal time looking at
and breeding with hopefuls from both of our lines. Carolyn noted his
satisfaction with our progress, and he spoke highly of his VV72 seedlings in his
last contribution for the Reblooming Iris Robin.
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| Mabel Andrews |
Northward Ho |
Now or Later |
Perfume Counter |
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| Red Grapes |
Renown |
Sign of Leo |
Sign of Virgo |
I brought bloomstalks from two of his older
seedlings to the Region 4 Fall Flower Show in
Fredericksburg. Even though neither one won top honors in the seedling division, PP36 and RR39
received a lot of favorable attention at the meeting. Lloyd came to
Richmond
for a final time to see my garden in fall bloom. His health had worsened since
spring, but he found enough resolve to spend two days with us and to look at
three of his older rebloom seedlings PP61, SS111 and SS129 in full bloom. A
couple of additional fall hopefuls were unfortunately still in bud stage, but we
had great fun speculating on their eventual bloom. We agreed, at the time, there
was nothing to introduce, but some of our seedlings had lots of breeding
potential.
News soon indicated Lloyd had an inoperable
malignant tumor on his liver. His condition began to deteriorate, and he was
unable to write a contribution to the latest round of the Reblooming Iris Robin.
I ended up composing a report for both of us highlighting the best fall rebloom
in years for
Central Virginia
and Region 4. It was ironic I would soon get sick too, and my subsequent
recuperation prevented me from seeing him one last time.
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Silver
Dividends |
Spirit of
Memphis |
Sugar
Blues |
Summer
Holidays |
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| Sunny Disposition |
Violet Classic |
Youth Dew |
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I’ll miss our customary Sunday night phone
calls. We would spend time researching parentages, and I was always amazed at
his recall of selections introduced decades ago. He was always patient with me
in teaching me the basics of iris breeding. Lloyd also helped me take steps
towards certification as an AIS Garden Judge. I believe a number of major
breakthroughs lay on the horizon. Some of his space age seedlings showed great
progress in reliable rebloom and advancement in flower form over the past year.
We were just scratching the surface.
Despite considerable resistance, Lloyd
Zurbrigg never tired of his goal of increasing the popularity of reblooming
bearded iris. His groundbreaking creations, such as Immortality and Clarence
will continue to be a living testament to his inventiveness and creativity in
manipulating iris genes. I mourn the absence of his physical presence, but his
spirit and enthusiasm will continue to guide me in growing his seedlings in my
garden rows.
Doc was my best friend in the iris world, and I will miss the magical presence
this gentle and unassuming man had on my life. The piano in our living room is
silent, but the glowing blooms of Lloyd Zurbrigg’s decades worth of rebloom
introductions serve to remind me of God’s gift of love for all of us.
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