Holland Hort Tour Dubbed 'Incredible'

Holland Horticulture Tour
In the gardens-Above, posing in the gardens of
Palace Het Loo in Apeldoorn, Holland, are, first row,
from left, Josh Smitherman, Kyle Creamer, Mallory
Jones, Whitney Griffin and Matt Wilson. Second
row, from left, Kaye Jernigan, Amber Young
and AU horticulture professor Joe Eakes.

Sometimes, an experience is so awesome, you just can't find the words to do it justice. That's how AU horticulture senior Matt Wilson feels about the Henry P. Orr Endowment 2006 horticultural study tour to Holland.

"It was incredible, absolutely incredible," Wilson says. And if the hundreds of photos that he, his six fellow student travelers and faculty adviser Joe Eakes took to document the journey are any indication, incredible is an understatement.

"It was a very diverse trip in terms of what we saw," Eakes says. "Every single stop we made was a good one."

The 10-day trip in May took students to several private gardens as well as a number of well-known sites, including Aalsmeer, the world's largest flower auction; Boskoop, the nursery center of Holland; the Keukenhof Exhibition, a world-renowned 70-acre display garden that is the world's largest exhibition of blooming tulips, daffodils and hyacinths; and the Hortus Bulborum, an open-air living museum that is home to many species of rare bulbs.

"We got to see the whole scope of flower and bulb production-from the seed to the nursery production all the way to the market," Wilson says.

The Henry P. Orr Endowed Fund for Horticultural Excellence was established in 2000 by the AU Department of Horticulture and a group of former horticulture students who studied under the late Orr.

Flowers in Holland
The 10-day trip in May took students to several private gardens as well as a number of well-known sites.

Orr, who taught at AU from 1947 until his retirement in 1981, was a noted horticulturist who worked with many facets of the industry-from landscaping and plant identification to greenhouse design. However, his signature service to students, and the reason many of his former students credit him for their successes, was his insistence that classroom education be augmented with real-world experience in the industry.

The endowment was established to support undergraduate education outside the classroom by funding events such as an international study tour.

In addition to Wilson, horticulture seniors participating in the tour included Kyle Creamer, Whitney Griffin, Kaye Jernigan, Mallory Jones, Josh Smitherman and Amber Young.

Each student will be required to make a formal presentation on the tour during fall semester.

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