Consulting Rosarians
Horticulture Judges
Arrangement Judges
Carolyn Buman
Carolyn Buman
Carolyn Buman
Consulting Rosarian Qualifications
Any member of the American Rose Society may qualify as a Consulting Rosarian
by doing the following:
- Must be a member, (regular or joint member) of the American Rose Society
for three consecutive years.
- Must be an active member of a local rose society.
- Must have grown roses of various types for at least five years and should
be knowledgeable in all equipment and materials related to rose culture.
- Must provide letters of recommendation from any three Consulting Rosarians,
on the form provided by their District Consulting Rosarian Chairman.
- Must attend an ARS school/workshop for Consulting Rosarians and complete
an open book examination based on the material contained in the Consulting
Rosarian manual. Once you pass the exam, you do not have to take it again.
- Must know and be willing to live up to the Consulting Rosarian Guidelines.
- Must be willing to attend no less than one Consulting Rosarian School
in every four-year period.
- Must submit a completed individual annual report form to the District
Chairman of Consulting Rosarians. If no report is submitted in a three-year
period the CR will be dropped from the program. A warning letter will be
issued after two years of non-compliance.
- Must submit a Roses in Review Report to the RIR District Coordinator each
year.
- Must exhibit a continuing willingness to share knowledge and an enthusiasm
for the rose and the American Rose Society.
Horticulture Judges Qualifications
Any person applying for an Apprentice Rose Judge Certification must have
the
following qualifications:
- Must be a member, either regular or joint for 36
consecutive months
immediately preceding application.
- Must have personally grown garden roses
or been involved in their culture
for five years.
- Must know intimately the characteristics and range of variability
of at
least 100 varieties, of largely grandifloras, hybrid teas, floribundas,
miniatures, Mini-Floras, climbers and Old Garden Roses and be able to verify
labeling.
- Know and follow ARS show rules and be aware of standards of judging;
know the technical
requirements concerning disbudding, bud vs. bloom, ideal form, substance,
color, size,
etc.
- Must be observant and careful in all details. 6. Must be able to
substantiate decisions with concrete and specific reasons.
- Must be a
person of high
integrity who is able to subjugate all personal likes, dislikes and
biases.
- Must be
diplomatic, constructive, definite in adhering to rules and passing judgment.
- Must
have
successfully exhibited (by winning two ARS certificates and five blue
ribbons) for at
least three years in at least five rose shows.
- Must have
successfully exhibited (by winning two ARS certificates and five blue ribbons)
for at
least three years in at least five rose shows.
- Must have worked as a
show clerk in at
least three rose shows, in this way familiarizing himself with proper show
procedures.
- Must have completed an accredited judging school, (which need
not be in the district where
the applicant resides) and passed the written and practical test.
- If
an applicant is
not successful in passing the test, one year must elapse before a member
may reapply.
Procedure
Prospective apprentice judges must make application at least six weeks prior
to attending a District Judging School to allow for membership verification.
Apprentice applications to apply to become an Apprentice Judge are available
from the District Chairman of Judges. Applications should be distributed to
instructors before or at the beginning of a District Judging School. These
must be completed and submitted with examination papers at the close of the
school with the registration fee. An ARS member may take an examination at
any District or area school; he/she need not be a resident of the District
in which the school is held.
Apprentice Judging
Once an applicant has met all the above qualifications and successfully completed
a judging school, they become an Apprentice Judge. As such, the apprentice
is required to judge at least five shows and receive favorable evaluations
from the Accredited Judges they judged with. Once this is successfully accomplished,
the Apprentice may apply to the National Chairman of Judges to become an Accredited
Judge.