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My First Iris Introductions in 2025

Cosmogenesis (Tall Bearded)

  

Encouragemint (Standard Dwarf Bearded)

Hybridizing New Iris Varieties

What I know as an amateur

(written in 2020)


To wake up each spring morning in anticipation of greeting a few new flowers that you have had a hand in creating is something else! It is the drive and inspiration behind this whole experiment in gardening and genetics. It is a lot of work, much more than I expected, but it is a welcome challenge. 


As a hybridizer, I am interested in breeding good garden plants with an eye on the unique or different. For me, in the iris world, this means certain novelty characteristics such as broken color, space age, or variegated foliage varieties. However, these are not the only characteristics I am interested in with hybridizing. For now it is a fairly wide focus with plenty of experimentation and I am pretty fond of the dwarf and intermediate classes, and working with them. I am also interested in rebloom and what the climate hear in Northeast Ohio can contribute to that, plus what it can offer for somewhat cold-hardy genetics. When I lose seedlings, like I did last season (2019 - when I originally wrote this in 2020), due to an unseasonable wet spring that caused more rot issues than normal, I try to allow myself consolation in the fact that only the best survivors are being weeded out. I cannot wait to see where this pursuit leads in the years to come and like many hybridizers wish I had started down this path much earlier in life so that real goals can be achieved through many generations. 


There is a lot that goes into the work of gardening and planning of breeding iris, but it is not an insurmountable task. There is nothing special one needs to know. You pollinate, hope for good seed counts, sow the seed, hope for the best, and evaluate over a number of years (that is an over simplification). The real task is the effort or muscle that you will put in...but the rewards are great. For me, it feels like a very long-term painting or art project. It just IS. It is a strange predicament for me. Here I am looking at something I have touched and nurtured and I am given the opportunity to see living art. I think that is the crux of it. Living art is something I never dreamed of ten years ago. But here it is. Attainable with effort, trial, and research. I like the entire process. I even enjoy the endless cataloguing and meticulous record-keeping. It is a world of its own, and is fun and inviting, much in part due to the people whom paved a path in the practice of breeding iris, and are open to sharing knowledge and advice. It's a good community.

'Encouragemint' One of my very first iris introductions in 2025. Formerly Seedling 17.3G 



More on Iris and Hybridizing

The Process (written around 2020, sorta for those not immersed in the iris world)

This endeavor to hybridize/breed new iris varieties has been a long journey. For me, it is like a painting or any other artwork, just in slow-motion. The man-hours involved in gardening and caring for them, pollinating, collecting seed, planting out seedlings, weeding (AHHH - the godforsaken weeding!), cataloging, photographing, selecting, researching, did I mention WEEDING, is a TON of work - none of which was in my wheelhouse a number of years ago! A big part of hybridizing is the cataloging and record keeping that is involved - I keep actual excel file spreadsheets of plants and seedlings, intricate maps for the plantings, and binders of all the notes etc. for records and evaluation of plants. At this point, I can still remember or look up exactly where each variety came from or was obtained. I also still have a fairly good mental map of where specific plants are located out in the field/garden - it gets worse each year with the additional planting of hundred or thousands of my seedlings and any new varieties I purchase online. 


An indispensable resource has been the American Iris Society's Iris Encyclopedia or the Iris Wiki - as it is often shortened. Here you can look up pedigrees and genetic parentage of many of the newly named or "introduced" varieties of iris being bred by hybridizers around the world. Being meticulous and charting things out pays off when you are constantly trying to improve your approach. It has been much more work than I originally thought. Yet, it is truly rewarding. 


As I've already stated, it is inspiring to wake up in the early springtime morning with anticipation of seeing a brand new flower, that you had a hand in creating, which no one else has ever laid eyes on before. Each day you get to go out to the garden beds and sit down to greet several new cheerful faces. I'm sure I've had conversations with a few - it sounds weird, but in a way they speak back. In a very real sense, if your are looking at a variety that someone has taken the time care for and name, you ARE having a visual conversation of what they saw within the bloom and plant. It was selected for and speaks volumes. 


So...the thrill and excitement is the impetus for this endeavor to make "living art." An added benefit is the incorporation of everything I've learned from growing/breeding iris combining with my art-making. A number of large scale paintings are in mind just waiting to undergo the formality of becoming. I'm  taking my time. They will come. During the winter months, one year, I'll get around to a few large scale watercolor iris paintings. I've been patient as a painter/artist, happy to learn something new and I've been content getting in the dirt instead of the paint for many years. One day the two will merge, and already have, with my art-making through my photography experience. Hybridizing, photographing, working in the yard - it all brings a joy other pursuits often haven't, and more importantly has put me in tune with the rhythms of nature and working outside. If nothing else, I certainly get my exercise, and very often, a cleansing of mind - that I find comes with mundane repetitive work, except it never really feels like work. That last part is important. It is a mindset, and it is a driving factor and allure of it all for me. The payoffs have come in the form of better physical and mental health plus being a part of a community that is unique and welcoming. The irisarians, hybridizers, and iris lovers are a great group of individuals - in fact, a model from which other communities could stand to learn.


All that said, I am not yet near the point that it takes to have my own registered or named varieties. 


(UPDATE: I introduced my first two varieties in 2025 - and have completed several paintings large and small scale see below) 


The majority of photographs and iris varieties currently available here, are of plants hybridized by breeders and from iris gardens found online. There is a surprisingly large iris community on the web. In short, I have purchased and propagated these plants that have been photographed - and my collection is always growing while yard space is dwindling. This stock is being utilized for my own breeding programs and sales to support the ever-expanding garden. Last I counted, I grow over 700 varieties and thousands of my own plants, called seedlings, from my own crosses. Many of these seedlings will become compost after blooming, for not being up to certain standards as a good garden plant etc. Only a small percentage will perform, proving worthy of introduction and display new or exciting qualities to warrant naming/registration with the American Iris Society. 


From pollinating an iris to getting seed in a seedpod is a several month process if the cross is successful. If you are lucky, and after drying seed, and giving them some attention you can then get seeds to germinate over winter (I've had luck doing so indoors) and then have a good-sized plants ready to be planted-out the following summer. From planting-out to seeing a first or "maiden" bloom is often a 2-3 year investment, for me. A first year bloom is a lucky rarity. Plus, "first year" is a misnomer, since the plant is actually 2 years after the time when the pollination/cross was made. I number my seedlings beginning with the year the cross was made. If the seedling is 17.3G for example, the cross was made in the year 2017. The #3 is the 3rd cross, of all pollinations attempted that year. In a Rite-in-the-Rain all-weather notepad I jot down the parents - all of the seed sown from that cross will begin with these two numbers corresponding to the year and number. As they bloom for the first time, often not the same year, making decision-making even more difficult I will assign a letter to those that I decide to keep around. I used to give everything a letter, as it bloomed from a given cross. Now, I often give a maiden-blooming plant a shovel, because I can see immediately it must go the way of the compost pile and maybe it gets a quick iphone photo. This was hard at first but it is a must and you MUST be aggressive about selection. In my garden I still cull everything this way, by hand immediately, and have learned that marking things or flagging things to keep can lead to problems months later. On such a small scale, I like being able to approach the process in this way. 


There has been a learning curve, especially because I am coming at this from the angle of being an artist, and sadly, not having a natural green thumb. Iris are forgiving, however, and afford a wonderful chance to create something new. Each seed you reap will be a completely genetically unique cross of the parent plants, thus, no two are alike, with siblings that can often appear completely different from one another. That said, with a decserning eye, you can often see both parents in a seedling or group of seedlings  


I hope you will enjoy my foray into gardening and the art I see in it. 


A video (not mine) to see how hand pollination of an iris is done.


Another video (not mine) of hand pollinating an iris. 


Informational video on pollination and genetics (again, not mine.)


I should make some videos. Facebook and the algorithms are always coaxing me, but I must be a contrarian.


I do sell plants (named/introduced varieties) during the months of JUNE - SEPTEMBER.

I typically post a list or gallery of available plants on my facebook page or Plants for Sale page in late spring.


For iris questions I'm best contacted via messaging on my facebook Davids Iris Garden page.


Please see my Contact page if you have any questions. 

  

For more on registering/naming an iris visit  The American Iris Society Website

My very first iris hybrid maiden bloom. I  couldn't compost this plant. Now named 'Cosmogenesis'.

My very first iris hybrid maiden bloom. I  couldn't compost this plant. Now named 'Cosmogenesis'.  

Recent Oil Painting of 'Encouragemint' an SDB iris registered and named in 2025

Encouragemint, (2025) Oil on Panel (12 X 12 inches)

    The Willot Iris Garden

    Over the years, as my interest in iris grew, I began seeking out local clubs and gardens to join and participate in. That is how I came across the Willot garden. The Willot garden is right off of I-90 at the northern end of Rockefeller Park and The Cleveland Cultural Gardens, which are interspersed along Martin Luther King Jr. Drive. The whole area is beautiful but is even more so throughout the spring. The only other sizable iris garden nearby, that I know, is about 45 minutes from Cleveland called the Schoepfle Garden located in Birmingham, OH - and for me the Willot garden is already a hour and a half trek. Still, I try to get up there several times each spring to help weed and to photograph - then, after a bit of sweating, I grab a Long Island iced tea with some Flautas at the Tacologist restaurant on Euclid Blvd. right next to University Circle! It's a beautiful part of Cleveland with the Cleveland Botanical Gardens, The Cleveland Museum of Art, and the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, all nearby. In my phantasy world, a project for the future would be to have a small group of iris enthusiasts from the Youngstown/Boardman area to work on fundraising and construct a similar garden area with both the Mill Creek Metroparks or Boardman Park. I should note that Mill Creek does have a small iris display, but I'm afraid their iris may lack the attention, and sunlight, given to the rose garden or incredible daffodil displays at the Fellows Riverside Garden. 


    I've pulled a good share of weeds at the Willot garden and was assigned the task of taking "mugshots" to help catalogue their collection in 2019. The garden is maintained by volunteer work and a good portion of that is by fellow members of the Northeast Ohio Iris Society (NEO) Bob and Sandy Pindell. A huge amount of work is also done by Ron Hartmiller, a trained horticulturalist, and serving conservator of the Willot Garden. Our NEO Iris Society president, Fred Pedersen, takes time in tidying up the space too - I'm not sure how they all keep up with it - that garden is always in pristine condition! Bob, Sandy, and Ron are all full of knowledge on iris, and are willing to share that with visitors, whom will likely encounter each of them on any given weekend at the garden throughout the spring. 


    I think everyone in the Northeast Ohio Iris Society are looking forward to hosting the regional meeting in 2021, and I am especially excited to have some of my own seedlings growing alongside the Willot garden in the newly installed seedling display garden. Kudos to Louis DiSanto, a fellow hybridizer, for coordinating and installing the display garden - a ton of work went into it and that does not go unnoticed. Some of his seedlings can be seen in the Willot seedling display bed, and here on the American Iris Society Region 6 website. Louis has some really nice species and MTB hybrids, in my opinion, and recently became an American Iris Society judge - something I hope to do someday. He is also a storehouse of knowledge and has always been eager and gracious enough to share what he knows. 


    I've compiled a missing list (below) in coordination with Bob Pindell, and others, of iris that the Willots bred but are no longer located at the garden, never got there, or are "missing." I've been able to track down several varieties (and donate them to the garden) from online iris garden sites or via facebook groups, but many remain out there, several without even such as a photo on the iris wikipedia. I, for one, am curious what one of the Willot hybrids named 'Falconskeape' (TB) looks like, if it is out there somewhere. I think I just like the name. The Willot's focused mainly on smaller dwarf varieties. Thus, a good portion of the garden is devoted to the little guys. There is still quite a display of larger Tall Bearded iris and many other species. The garden also has an annual plant sale, plus potted varieties for sale to visitors, and I believe the proceeds go to the volunteer upkeep at the Rockefeller Greenhouse facility. I, myself, grow many Willot varieties, as a sort of back-up, for what is essentially a living museum to the great efforts of Tony and Dorothy Willot.


    Willot Iris Garden sign

    NEOIS Seedling Evaluation and Judges Training Garden

    Located right beside the Willot Iris Garden @ Rockefeller Park Greenhouse in Cleveland, OH. This garden has been a huge boon to the hybridizers working in Northeast Ohio! It also serves to educate and is used for judges training as well as showcasing guest Iris sent in by hybridizers around the world. It will be part of the Region 6 Meeting display beds in Spring of 2026. I am also honored to have several of my own hybrids growing here and being tested in a slightly different climate than my own. The area is about a 120 minute drive from my home and that, coupled with the lake effect from Lake Erie, bumps this up a full climate zone from my own gardens further south. It also seems to have a magical element of great sandy well-drained soil. This garden was the brain-child of Louis DiSanto and other members of the NEOIS and is also fabulously maintained by the members. 


    The following gallery of seedlings are all planted and can be seen growing at the NEOIS garden currently (2025/2026). This means after a substantial portion will likely bloom their during the 2026 bloom season - having been planted in summer/fall of 2024.


    Several have also been sent as guest iris for the upcoming 2026 American Iris Society National Convention in New Jersey and the 2027 Convention in Oklahoma. 


    NorthEast Ohio Iris Society Seedling Evaluation and Judges Training Garden 

    Show More

    Visiting the Willot Iris Garden

    (Excerpt from the info sheet found in the outdoor pamphlet holder at the entrance to the garden)

    The Willot Iris Garden is a tribute to iris experts and longtime greenhouse volunteers, Tony and Dorothy Willot. It features many of the nearly 40 cultivars of the iris species that they bred and grew right in this location. 

    In addition to the Willot irises the garden contains examples of old and new irises by other hybridizers and examples of species of irises sometimes found in gardens in the Cleveland area. 

    Each clump of iris has a marker with the name of the iris, the name of the hybridizer, the year of introduction, class, and a location code. 

    The garden is a project of the Friends of Greenhouse in cooperation with the North East Ohio Iris Society, the Gardeners of Greater Cleveland and the Advisory Board of the Cuyahoga Master Gardeners. The Garden is an official display of The American Iris Society and the Historic Preservation Society, maintained by volunteers and funded by the sale of potted irises from the garden, the sale of inscribed bricks, grants and gifts from organizations and individuals. 

    You can help support the Willot Iris Garden by becoming a member of the Friends of Greenhouse (FOG), a 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation. 

    (Post from my facebook garden page October, 2019)

    A visit to the Willot Iris Garden:

    The Willot Iris Garden is a great treasure to Cleveland - located by the Rockefeller Park Greenhouse and completely maintained by volunteer work. This year they’ve added new garden space to showcase iris seedlings and some recent named varieties by hybridizers from around the country. The new display garden will function as a display for the Regional (region 6) meeting in 2021. I am grateful for the opportunity to display a few of my own seedlings - which are honestly a bit too early on in the process of determining their garden potential, but I’m thankful none-the-less for them to be seen. Since my wife and I were up in Cleveland, fairly late in the season (2019), I thought I would stop by and see how things were looking and catch any rebloomers. One lonely flower was in bloom 🙁 ‘Lo Ho Silver’ - Byers 1989 IB-RE. A few others with bloom stalks. And I’m happy to report my own seedlings seem to like it here! 


    A side note: Over the last several years I’ve tried to locate some of the more rare or “missing” iris bred by the Willots not found in this garden. And I’m still always on the lookout for several more! They bred quite a few - mostly with a focus on dwarf varieties. I was able to donate several varieties this past summer, after growing them and checking their identification, to the Willot Garden as part of an effort a few of us have undertaken to preserve their efforts. It’s been a fun side project.


    The Willot Iris Garden is a treasure to Cleveland Ohio and the hybridizing work of Anthony and Dorothy Willot. A full catalog of iris they introduced can be found here.


    A bit more on the Willot Garden and a list of "missing" Willot hybrids is below. If you have any (especially the miniature dwarfs) let me know.

    Dorothy Willot and me at the Willot Garden - Rockefeller Park Greenhouse, Cleveland, OH (2016)

    Dorothy Willot and me at the Willot Garden - Rockefeller Park Greenhouse, Cleveland, OH (2016)

    A List of Missing Willot Iris

    Please get in touch if you have any of these varieties or know where any of them can be found. Thank you.

    Download PDF

    Hybridizing Tools


      2016 Seedlings showing promise and a few favorites (Updated Nov. 2025)

      Sibling to 38C that won "Best Seedling of Show" at the North East Ohio Iris Society Show in spring 2019 - this one has horned beards making it a space-age iris, denoted as SA.('Montmartre' X 'Gothic')

        2017 Seedlings showing promise and a few favorites (Updated Nov. 2025)

        2018 Seedlings showing promise and a few favorites (Updated Nov. 2025)

        2019 Seedlings showing promise and a few favorites (Updated Nov. 2025)

        Seedling 19.308A

        Seedling 19.308A

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