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Heart-Leaves of Lilac
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For decades, Rogers spent two weeks each June stripping tiny florets from the branches of the lilacs blooming at UNH's Woodman Farm. Back at the lab, hunched over heaps of fingernail-sized blossoms, Rogers gently coaxed each one open with tweezers, exposing the two anthers, and removing the pollen. Later, he returned to the lilac branch he had recently stripped, tiny paintbrush in hand. Standing in the morning sun like some benevolent wizard of the garden, he would dust thousands of pistils (left behind when the floret is removed) with pollen. He covered each cluster with a small paper bag, secured at the bottom with a "twist 'em," and carefully labeled it. "That way I always knew exactly what cross I'd made," says Rogers, "and no bees or butterflies could get in to mess up the works."


New Hampshire's state flower, the common lilac, Syringa vulgaris, is one of 30 species of lilac. There are also 1,500 lilac cultivars, or "cultivated varieties," designed by plant breeders who cross-pollinate among species to create specific characteristics.

Rogers repeated this process over and over again each year, dusting maybe 1,000 blossoms a day, perhaps 10,000 in a season. And then he waited. At the end of the summer, he collected all his bags and returned to the lab, where he dug out the seeds that had resulted from his work. In February, he planted seedlings in the greenhouse. Eventually the strongest seedlings made it into the ground. And then the longest wait of all began. "It takes about 10 years to get from start to finish," says Rogers. During those years he watched and made notes: What's the shape of the bush? Do the branches break off? What's the color of the flower? The quality of the fragrance? When does it bloom? Is it susceptible to mildew? Of the 100 or so seeds that germinated each year, maybe a dozen made it onto Rogers' short list.

When the nurserymen came to visit, they walked with Rogers through the bushes, looking for what they thought would sell. Sometimes, they found something--like Agnes Smith, which went on to be chosen as the best plant introduction of 1973 by the International Propagators Society. Late-blooming and loaded with huge white blossoms, it is the lilac for which Owen Rogers will be most remembered. The patient work of a patient man.

Agnes Smith, however, for all its success, is not the lilac Rogers himself was after. His quest for his "magnum opus" continued, year after year. Along the way, he created a number of other commercially successful cultivars. James Macfarlane, named for the man who ran the UNH greenhouses for many years, has dark red buds that open to clear rosy pink; the late-blooming Jesse Hepler, named for a UNH horticulture professor, blooms in pale lavender and slowly changes to shades of pink; and Helen Chamberlin, named for a Federated Garden Clubs member famous for the half-mile of lilacs she planted in "the Lilac City" of Rochester, N.H., blooms deep purple.



lilac

lilac

The more than 100 varieties of lilacs growing on the UNH campus come in seven different color classes, including purple, pink and white. Top right: James Macfarlane, bred by Owen Rogers, is popular for its late-blooming pink flowers.

Retired now, Rogers doesn't pollinate much anymore. His search for the ultimate cultivar is winding down. But he still keeps busy giving occasional talks. And he still attends the International Lilac Society Convention every year, where several hundred people from around the globe get together to talk lilacs for three days straight. Is he disappointed that he hasn't achieved his goal? Rogers pauses and smiles. For a moment, he recalls those early mornings among the lilacs at Woodman Farm, days when the sun is just lifting into the sky and the grass is heavy with dew. He remembers standing alone, gazing at a brand new cultivar, a flower no one else on earth has ever seen before. "Now that," says Rogers, "that is really worth something."

So, yes, the quest remains unfinished. But Owen Rogers is content. He has had his reward. ~

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