The American Rose Society Needs You!
Click here to download
the printable ARS membership form.
Top Ten Reasons To Join the ARS
By Robert B. Martin, Jr.
The American Rose Society (ARS) is the largest specialized plant
society in the U.S. Founded in 1892, this national nonprofit educational
organization promotes the culture and appreciation of the rose -
America's national flower. If you love roses, you should belong
to the ARS. Why? Here are ten good reasons - in reverse order
- for you to consider:
1. Support Your Local Rose Society
There are more than 350 local rose societies affiliated with the
ARS. You don't have to be an ARS member to belong to one,
and it is good to support your local rose society. The ARS also
supports your local society. For example, it provides information
to local societies on how the local societies can better serve their
members. It directs inquiries from prospective members to local
societies. It provides a blanket insurance program for local societies
that enables them to obtain insurance for their activities at considerably
less expense than if they tried to obtain insurance separately.
Also, the ARS is recognized by the Internal Revenue Service as an
educational organization that is exempt from Federal income taxation.
Local rose societies affiliated with the ARS are also eligible for
tax exemption as an educational organization under a "group
exemption" procedure under the blanket of the ARS. Contributions
to local rose societies that have been recognized as eligible are
tax deductible. This support of the local rose societies by the
ARS is valuable, and you support your local rose society by joining
the ARS.
2. Visit Promised Rose Gardens
ARS headquarters and the Gardens of the American Rose Center are
located in Shreveport, Louisiana. With over 42 acres and 20, 000
roses, the American Rose Center is the nation's largest park dedicated
to roses. The Gardens are open seven days a week March 30th through
October 31st, and in the evenings between Thanksgiving and Christmas
Eve for a wonderful Holiday treat. Your membership in the ARS gives
you free admission should your travels ever take you to Shreveport.
But if they don't, your automatic membership in the American
Horticultural Society's Reciprocal Garden Admission Program allows
you free admission to more than 100 select gardens and horticultural
events throughout the United States.
3. Support Rose Science
The ARS is an educational organizational that supports the horticultural
science of roses. It undertakes cooperative research programs on
rose problems at universities and experimental stations It also
tests and evaluates rose-related products. As the International
Registration Authority for Roses, the ARS records the registration
of the roses of the world and maintains the most comprehensive database
of roses of historical and botanical importance in the world. The
ARS publishes the information periodically in Modern Roses, the
latest edition of which, Modern Roses XI, contains information on
over 24,000 rose varieties. Your membership supports these important
activities.
4. Engage Your Special Interests
The ARS has a variety of publications about roses, including special
interest quarterly bulletins. They include Rose Exhibitors' Forum,
devoted to all aspects of rose exhibiting and rose culture; Rose
Arranger's Bulletin, featuring tips on arranging, design, materials,
techniques and arrangement show results; Mini/Mini-Flora Rose Bulletin,
offering a wealth of information specifically designed for miniature
and mini-flora roses; and The OGR & Shrub Gazette, with articles
for lovers of old and landscape roses. There is a small added cost
for each, but your membership is the starting place.
5. Become a Consulting Rosarian
The ARS has a Consulting Rosarian Program consisting of more than
2,200 expert rose gardeners around the country who provide free
expert advice to gardeners who want to learn how to grow better
roses. You don't have to be a member of ARS to use the services
of your local Consulting Rosarian. But you do have to be a member
if you want to be a CR; in fact you have to have been a member for
at least the last three years. The best way to learn about roses
is to prepare to teach, so if you want to learn a lot about roses,
you want to be a part of this program. The CRs are the evangelists
of roses. Hallelujah! If you want to carry the gospel of roses you
have to become a CR. Amen.
6. Show Your Roses - Judge Others
A central activity of nearly every local rose society is the annual
sponsorship of a rose show. The rose show is an opportunity for
rosarians to show non-rose growers the vast potential and beauty
of roses. You don't have to be a member of the ARS to show
your roses in your local show, in fact you don't have to be
a member to show your roses in a national show. But let's
suppose you really want to get serious about growing and showing
the best roses. Then maybe you ought to become a rose judge and,
to do that, you have to have been an ARS member for at least three
years. And suppose you wanted to compete for District and National
rose show trophies - the top awards. Well, you also have to
be a member to do that.
7. Search for the Perfect "Ten"
The ARS has for 78 consecutive years conducted an annual survey
of newer rose varieties, to determine how they actually grow in
the gardens of America. Now called Roses in Review, the roses are
rated on a ten-point scale, and older varieties are periodically
reassessed. You don't have to be a member to participate in
this survey, but it's valuable and your membership supports
it. Then each year the ARS publishes and sends to every member,
The Handbook for Selecting Roses, in which the findings from these
surveys are published, along with information on thousands of commercially
available roses. The Handbook, which fits right in your pocket,
will help you select roses for your gardens and can save you some
big bucks in making the best choices. It might even help you find
the perfect "ten" for your garden.
8. Read All About It
Your membership in the ARS will bring you 11 monthly issues of
the American Rose, a 46 page full color monthly magazine with columns,
feature articles, advertisements and information on all aspects
of rose growing. Then, in December of each year, you will receive
the American Rose Annual, a perfect bound 132 soft cover book containing
full-length feature articles with scientific information on roses
and rose culture, plus articles of general interest to rose lovers.
The American Rose Annual has been published annually since 1916
and back issues are collector items, challenging some members to
collect them all.
9. Connect With Nice People
Rose people are the nicest people I know. I have found the nicest
ones of all in the ARS. They gather at two National Conventions
and a Miniature Rose National Conference each year to share their
roses, hear lectures, take garden tours and hang out together. They've
even been known to dress as roses. Each District also has its own
convention and conferences where local rosarians gather. The ARS
is a volunteer organization and through it you get the opportunity
to work together with people who have but one primary purpose -
to enhance knowledge of the rose. The personal connections people
build through their involvement in non-profit organizations provide
the backbone of relationship communities, and the ARS is just that
- a relationship community. Through service on committees,
in offices and the undertaking of commitments to the ARS, I have
developed friendships throughout the United States. Everywhere I
go, I know there are rosarians who welcome the opportunity to share
their gardens, their friendship and to simply talk roses. With the
ARS I have friends, many of whom I haven't met yet. You can
be part of this community of friends.
10. The Roses Deserve It
So that's a lot of benefits to consider, but now we come
to the most important. The benefits cited above are the tangible
things we get from joining the ARS, the quid pro quo. But the most
important thing is not tangible; it cannot be evaluated as a business
transaction, and whether you get your money's worth. The higher
question is not what we get but what we give. The rose is the most
beautiful flower in God's creation, a gift that has been generously
given to us. It is not in the "getting" that we receive
but in the giving. By giving to roses, we receive from them. My
friend Lynn Snetsinger has said that we are the "Guardians
of the Rose." That is the role God gave to those of us who
love roses and the roses deserve it. The rose is so generous in
our gardens. It always gives back in multiples for whatever we put
into it. So how do you give back? Well, you join the community of
those of like mind and you give to it. To modify the words of President
John F. Kennedy: "Ask not what the rose can do you for you,
but ask instead what you can do for roses." As Sherlock Holmes
said to Dr. Watson: "Our highest assurance of the existence
of Providence seems to me to rest in the flowers. All other things,
our powers, our desires, our food, are all really necessary for
our existence in the first place. But this rose is an extra. Its
smell and its colour are an embellishment of life, not a condition
of it. It is only goodness which brings extras, and so I say again,
that we have much to hope for in the flowers." The ARS is
our hope for the rose and my hope is that you will join us.
Convinced? Click here to
download the printable ARS membership form or go to the ARS
website. There are roses waiting for you.
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