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Buddleja 'Pink Micro Chip'

Buddleja 'Pink Micro Chip'

One of the shortest, most compact cultivar of Buddleja with pink flowers. It grows up to 50-60 cm in height and width.  It forms lanceolate, dark green leaves covered with white tomentose from below, as well as pink, fragrant flowers which are gathered in elongated, paniculate inflorescences. It blooms from June to late autumn, attracting colourful butterflies. The variety is frost resistant (6b zone); it is fit for planting in containers.

Breeder: Dennis James Werner, USA. Market introduction: North Carolina State University.

Applicant: Szkółka Krzewów Ozdobnych Bogdan HAJDROWSKI, PL-32-084 Morawica, Mników 290, Poland

Astilbe COLOR FLASH

Astilbe Color Flash 'Beauty of Ernst'

The perennial with attractive, pink flowers and unusual, multicoloured leaves: dark green, red and purplish red. It forms effective crumps which grow up to 50-80 cm in height. The leaves wither in the winter. The flowers are tiny, pink, gathered in gentle, paniculate inflorescences, and they are beautifully displayed in comparison to dark leaves.  It blooms from July to August. The variety is frost resistant (5b zone).

Breeder: Henk Holtmaat, The Netherlands. Market introduction: de Vroomen Holland Garden Products, 2005.

Applicant: OGRODY O ZIELONYCH PROGACH – Szkółka Bylin, Przemysław Godlewski, PL-05-140 Serock, Skubianka, ul. Zegrzyńska 80, Poland

Jury for the Plant Novelties Competition 2017

Alicja Cecot
Journalist

A graduate of the Faculty of Horticulture at the Agricultural University in Krakow and postgraduate journalism studies at Jagiellonian University. Editor-in-chief of the bimonthly “Szkółkarstwo” for 14 years.  Worked as an editor for the magazine “Hasło Ogrodnicze”. Deputy-editor of the quarterly “Kwiaty”.  She is published in numerous gardening magazines at home and abroad, including FloraCulture International, Kertészet és Szőlészet. Co-author of the book “Potrety Kwiatów” and translator of English language books (including “Kompozycje kwiatowe”). A speaker at many trade conferences connected with national and international horticultural trade fairs. Currently editor of “Pod Osłonami” and portal www.podoslonami.pl.
Honory laureate of the Honorary Green Laurel award, granteded by the Polish Nurserymen Association.

Wiesław Gawryś
Polish Academy of Sciences Botanical Garden Graduate from Horticultural Technical School in Sochaczew and the Faculty of Horticulture at the Warsaw University of Life Sciences.  Has worked at the Botanical Garden of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw for 37 years. Initially, as dendrologist, then a specialist in tropical plants, and more recently involved in native flora. He serves as the Deputy Director.  Has participated in many botanical expeditions in Poland and abroad, among others to North Korea., Vietnam, Georgia, Kazakhstan, and Russia. Author of more than 250 popular scientific articles on dendrology, tropical plants and Polish flora.  Author the Latin-Polish dictionary of Herbaceous Plants. Primarily interested in Polish flora, the rules of botanical nomenclature, photography and his own garden.

 

Hanna Grzeszczak-Nowak
Botanical Garden at the University of Wrocław

Graduate of the Faculty of Horticulture at the Agricultural University of Poznan.  Since 1985, dendrologist at the Botanical Garden of the University of Wroclaw. Since 1988, acting director of the Wojsławice Arboretum, then inspector of this Arboretum.  Has consistently revitalized and developed the Arboretum. Maintains many unique collections of plants, including four national collections of types of Buxus, Hedera, Hemerocallis, and Rhododendrons. For years, promotes the cultivation of ornamental plants, organizing a number of events, including “HEMEROmania”, The Autumn Flower and Grass Festival, Lower Silesia Pumpkin Festival, Ivy weekend. Member of the Polish Dendrology Society, “Ericaceous Plants” Group, Efeu Deutsche Gesellschaft, Deutsche Gesellschaft Rhododendron. The author of numerous scientific publications, both domestic and foreign, books and many articles devoted to ornamental plants.
Laureate of the Honorary Green Laurel, awarded by the Polish Nurserymen Association for consistent and creative promotion of ornamental plants and horticultural culture.

Marco Hoffman
Netherlands Inspection Service for Horticulture

Botanist and taxonomist, currently head of the test team for new plant varieties at Naktuinbouw - Netherlands Inspection Service for Horticulture. For many years, researcher at Wageningen University in Lisse and the Nursery Experimental Station Boomteeltpraktijkonderzoek in Boskoop.  Conducts comparative experiments on new taxa of trees, shrubs and perennials for their suitability in gardens and urban green areas. Internationally renowned authority in the field of plant nomenclature, editor of “List of Names of Woody Plants” and “List of Names of Perennials”. Editor-in-chief of the Dutch annual “Dendroflora”, lecturer and author of numerous publications and articles in industry press, mostly Dutch, but also French and German.

 

Izabela Kaszuba
Polish Association of Garden Centers

Graduate of the Horticultural Faculty at the Warsaw University of Life Sciences. Owner of the Flora Point Świat Roślin garden center, offering a full assortment of potted plants, garden plants, cut flowers.  Member of the Polish Association of Garden Centers.

 

Grzegorz Pawlik
Editor-in-Chief of "Mój Piękny Ogród"

for 20 years he has been editor in magazine - „Mój Piekny Ogród”, the most popular gardening magazine in Poland. Presently, the editor in chief of this magazine is responsible for the content and artistic concept. He is a gardener of his choice, spending every spare moment on his own backyard garden in the suburbs of Wroclaw. For years he has been a passionate photographer of nature. What is more, he also is the author of many photographic articles of Polish and foreign gardens. He is the promoter of urban gardening and a proponent of saving old fruit varieties which are being displaced by industrial fruit trees.

dr Wojciech Podstolski
Polish Dendrology Society

A graduate of the Faculty of Biology at the University of Warsaw and doctor of biological sciences at the Insitute of Biochemistry and Biophysics at the Polish Academy of Sciences. Longtime collaborator and author of numerous articles concerning plant compositions and monographs of select types, published in magazines such as Kwietnik,  Ogrody and Zieleń to Życie.  Since 2009, he has worked in the Botanical Garden of the University of Warsaw, where he modernizes and develops the collection of the Plant Systems Department. He also consults about selection of plant species for garden designers. At the Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University in Warsaw, he lectures and conducts seminars on the history and upkeep of gardens, as well as the species selection and plant compositions. Member of the Polish Dendrology Society and ICOMOS.

 

Maja Popielarska
Journalist

Graduate of Landscape Architecture at the Warsaw University of Life Sciences. Popular and well-liked weather presenter on television since 1999. Since 2004 she has her own advice show about plant care and garden design – “Maja in the garden”. Author of gardening books. Winner of the prestigious Honorary Green Laurel award granted by the Polish Nurserymen Association for instilling and developing the passion of gardening in society.

 

dr Wiesław Szydło
Przewodniczący jury
Związek Szkółkarzy Polskich, Szkółka Drzew i Krzewów „Iglak Niewierz”

Absolwent Wydziału Ogrodniczego Szkoły Głównej Gospodarstwa Wiejskiego w Warszawie. Przez 25 lat pracownik naukowy Katedry Roślin Ozdobnych SGGW, prowadził zajęcia, wykłady i seminaria dotyczące szkółkarstwa ozdobnego. Autor licznych publikacji naukowych i książek, m.in. „Szkółkarstwo ozdobne”, „Rozmnażamy iglaki”, współautor i redaktor „Katalogu Roślin”, „Rośliny do każdego ogrodu” oraz artykułów popularnonaukowych publikowanych na łamach większości ukazujących się na rynku magazynów poświęconych tematyce roślin ozdobnych. Wiceprezes Związku Szkółkarzy Polskich, członek Polskiego Towarzystwa Dendrologicznego, członek Rady Naukowej Instytutu Ogrodnictwa w Skierniewicach. Od 25 lat prowadzi też własne gospodarstwo szkółkarskie.

Association story

The first reference showing the existence of nursery production on Polish land comes from the end of the XVIII century. This production started to grow rapidly in the middle of the XIX century.

After Poland regained independence, the first national organization was founded in Warsaw in 1924 – the Polish Association for Producers of Trees and Shrubs. Its first president, who served until his death, was Piotr Hoser. The purpose of the Association was to bring order to the lively market, adhere to plant selection, and the introduction of quality and qualification norms. In 1926 its members started to affix the association’s logo on their price lists and catalogs, the guarantee of high quality plants and professional integrity.

In the period between the wars, nursery specialization also took place. Firms were set up that produced perennials or root stock.  There were also fruit tree nurseries operated at the highest level. They were owned by outstanding pomologists, scholars and experimenters.

In the first half of the XX century, many valued Polish varieties of ornamental plants were released to the market, many known and propagated to the present. They include:

After the Second World War, nursery production in Poland could not develop. Its revival – both private and state, did not take place until after 1956. In the 1960s, dynamic progress was noted in rose nurserymanship. Production levels grew quickly. The production of deciduous trees and shrubs also developed, in part through the qualification of nurseries. In the 1970s the production and export of roses expanded. The country’s deepening economic crisis in the 1980s led to difficulties in selling plants and a definite slump in the production of trees and shrubs.

After 1989 nurserymen faced new challenges and opportunities. They took advantage of them, hence nursery production is the fastest growing area of horticulture in Poland.

The Polish Nurserymen Association was founded in the fall of 1991 by a dozen or so producers of ornamental nursery material. It quickly was noted in the chronicles of Polish nurserymanship, becoming an heir of traditions and the legacy of this industry.

From the outset, it was presumed that Association members would have to meet high ethical and professional requirements.  The association was consciously shaped as a non-profit organization in order to facilitate realization of the main (initially the existence of the Association) objectives, that being cooperation and mutual assistance of association members and community integration. The idea of founding such an association was coherent with the expectations of nurserymen, who – dispersed throughout the country – had no sense of common objectives or occupational solidarity.

Initially, there were 53 members in the Association. At the present time the Polish Nurserymen Association is the largest nursery association in Poland.

As the association develops, new activity objectives are being marked out, such as:

  • popularization of knowledge about plants, shrubs and perennials in society
  • facilitating contacts between producers and sellers
  • improving the quality of nursery material
  • increasing the plant assortment produced at nurseries
  • modernizing technologies of plant production

At the present time it is not difficult to find a farm which has achieved western European standards. Product quality is constantly being improved as well as care to prepare plants for sale. The number of specialized nurseries is increasing.

The main activity which the Association is known for includes:

  • International Exhibition “Greenery is Life” and a conference for persons dealing in greenery,
  • annual publication of a Catalog of Nurseries and Association Members
  • organization of General Meetings of Members, as well as training and lectures during such meetings
  • organization of trips for Association members,
  • working out catalogs of plants recommended by the association,
  • promotional activity and cooperation with the media

Mission of Polish Nurserymen Association

Polish Nurserymen Association is organization which gathers producers of the highest quality of trees, shrubs and perennials. Its aim is to integration of nursery environment in Poland, spreading modern methods of production and knowledge necessary to run nursery business, promoting of quality standards and professional ethics. The Association organizes International Exhibition GREEN IS LIFE, numerous lectures, seminars and conferences, produces publications both for amateurs and for professionals involved in green sector. In each activities tries to preach socially responsible idea of surrounding with plants. They are not only decoration, which provide aesthetic experience and make our lives more beautiful. First of all plants shape the environment
of man. By their inherent nature, at least producing oxygen and steam, ability to clean the air and soil from carcinogens or by bactericidal effect, they make our lives healthier and environment of our life is cleaner.

Polish Nurserymen Association tries to remind that development of cities, building of public infrastructure and industrialisation should be accompanied by care about condition of man environment and balanced development of our country. Logo of Association clearly shows the designated aim – this is hand suggestively giving the leaf, that is transferring idea: let’s live among the greenery, surround with plants, because those plants give us oxygen essential for life, clear environment, beautiful landscapes, green rooms and inside that - silence and rest.

Results of the Plant Novelties Competition 2018

GOLD MEDAL 

SILVER MEDALS

BROWN MEDALS

SPECIAL MENTIONS

PRESS AWARD

  • Hydrangea (hortensja) RUNAWAY BRIDE SNOW WHITE 'USHYD0405'PBR
    Applicant: PLANTPOL Sp. z o.o.

Salvia nemorosa 'Rose Marvel'PBR

Salvia nemorosa 'Rose Marvel'PBR

This is a low bushy perennial with upright habit and intensely pink flowers and involucres. While blooming it grows up to 30 cm in height. It creates small, elliptical leaves with corrugated edges. The blades of leaves are green and wrinkled. The flowers are pretty big, dorsiventral, pink, gathered in straight ear inflorescences. The plant blooms in June and July luring bees and butterflies. When overblown inflorescences are removed the plant is stimulated to form new flower buds, which extends its blooming period. The perennial is tolerant of ground, it grows well in moderately moist to dry soil, in the sunny locations. The variety is resistant to frost, Hardiness zone: 5. It is recommended to be planted in groups in the perennial beds, in rock gardens and in containers.

Breeder: Darwin Perennials, USA.

Applicant: Gospodarstwo Specjalistyczne PANEK, ul. M. Dąbrowskiej 12, 05-800 Pruszków, Poland

Rosa rugosa ANGELIA PURPLE 'Minrugo4'PBR

Rosa rugosa ANGELIA PURPLE 'Minrugo4'PBR

A shrub with dense, wide habit, creating straight, slightly branched prickle shoots, it reaches 1.5-2 in height. It expands with root suckers. The leaves are dark green, wrinkled, in the fall they turn into orange. The semi-double, purplish red and slightly fragrant flowers develop from June to August. The red, flattish round fruits ripen in August, the shrub is very decorative thanks to them until winter. The rose is very resistant to drought and frost, tolerant of the soil. It requires sunny or slightly shady locations. Hardiness zone: 3. The variety is decorative for the whole season to be planted in cities along the streets, for strengthening embankments as well as to be planted in home gardens.

Breeder: Minier Innovation Developpement, France

Applicant: MINIER Solutions Pro, Route des fontaines de l’Aunay, 49 250 Beaufort en Vallée, France

Rosa NEWSFLASH 'KENdutch'PBR

Rosa NEWSFLASH 'KENdutch'PBR

This is a climbing rose with very clear, orange color of flowers. It grows strongly, creates long shoots covered with thorns and big, dark green and glossy leaves. It grows up to 1.5-2 m in height. The flowers are big, semi-double, made up of numerous petals with the original coppery and orange color. They are gathered in clusters on tops of the stems. The shrubs bloom in the early summer and repeat blooming for the whole season. Non-fruiting. It requires sunny and warm locations, protected from wind, rich, clayish, well-drained and moderately moist soil with humus. The variety is resistant to fungal diseases. Hardiness zone: 6b. The rose is recommended to be planted in home gardens, growing on pergolas, fences, trellises and other supports.

Breeder: David Kenny, Ireland

Applicant: RosaPLANT Kamila Rakowska-Szlązkiewicz, Ul. Nowołęczna 3, 05-100 Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki, Poland