The Westridge Rose Garden hosted its first-ever mini rose pruning workshop with 26 senior citizens in attendance, offering a lecture followed by practical pruning sessions. The Durbanville Rose Garden team provided their expertise, hinting at promising future alliances between the two green havens. The workshop was hailed as a success by the community, with participants finding it to be an empowering journey and an inspiration for their own gardens. The event marks the beginning of more community-centric activities at Westridge Rose Garden.
The Westridge Rose Garden hosted a debut mini rose pruning workshop with 26 senior citizens attending. The workshop offered a lecture outlining the basics of rose pruning followed by practical pruning sessions. The Durbanville Rose Garden team brought their horticultural expertise to back the Westridge team in this fresh initiative, serving to magnify the day’s proceedings while also hinting at a promising potential for future alliances between the two green havens.
The Westridge Rose Garden in Mitchells Plain, under the patronage of the City of Cape Town, was a hubbub of activity recently. The garden played host to a debut mini rose pruning workshop—an event that saw the convergence of 26 enthusiastic local senior citizens, eager to delve into the realm of horticulture. This marked a considerable leap in the garden’s ongoing endeavour to make the local community participants in nurturing an appreciation for the world of plants.
The workshop got underway with an illuminating lecture that outlined the basics of rose pruning. This tutorial section was brimming with indispensable techniques and highlighted the benefits of regular pruning in promoting the growth of vibrant, healthy roses.
Following the theoretical part of the workshop, the participants were led into practical pruning sessions, enabling them to apply their newfound wisdom. These sessions took place under the watchful eyes of proficient gardening personnel, ensuring the participants could gain hands-on knowledge without jeopardizing these fragile plants.
A distinct standout of the day was the involvement of the Durbanville Rose Garden team. In spite of their annual pruning workshop being on a break this year, the Durbanville team brought their horticultural expertise to back the Westridge team in this fresh initiative. Their participation amplified the educational quotient of the event, infusing an additional layer of zeal and insight for the participants.
The Durbanville team’s contribution served to magnify the day’s proceedings while also hinting at a promising potential for future alliances between the two green havens. Durbanville Rose Garden, in fact, is already looking forward to reinstating their own workshop in the coming year.
The workshop’s success was hailed by representatives of the community. Councillor Patricia van der Ross, Mayoral Committee Member for Community Services and Health, commended the workshop, seeing it as an expression of the dynamic spirit alive within the Mitchells Plain community. She reiterated her commitment to back initiatives that enrich public spaces and encourage community involvement.
Further evidence of the workshop’s accomplishment was the proactive participation of Ward Councillor Ashley Potts, who was moved by the seniors’ hands-on commitment. He applauded the event as a trigger for community embellishment and unity.
For a significant number of attendees, the workshop transcended being a mere horticulture exercise—it was an empowering journey. Marlene January, a first-time participant, was clearly excited about her newfound passion to nurture roses in her own garden.
Likewise, Shariefa Toffar found the event to be a source of inspiration. Even though she initially doubted her gardening abilities, she left the workshop imbued with new knowledge and enthusiasm, even taking home cuttings from the pruned roses, intending to try her hand at propagation.
The Westridge Rose Garden’s pioneering mini rose pruning workshop marks the beginning of various community-centric activities in the pipeline. The obvious enthusiasm and delight exhibited by the senior participants underscore the positive impact such initiatives can make on local inhabitants, feeding both the garden and the spirit of the community. As the Westridge Rose Garden continues to bloom and prosper, it does so in symbiosis with the local community, reflecting the mutual dependency between nature and society.
The workshop was received positively by the community, with representatives commending the initiative and expressing their commitment to back endeavors that enrich public spaces and encourage community involvement. Participants also found the workshop to be an empowering and inspiring journey, with some taking home cuttings from the pruned roses to try their hand at propagation.
The Durbanville Rose Garden team provided their horticultural expertise, amplifying the educational quotient of the event and hinting at promising potential for future alliances between the two green havens.
The lecture portion of the workshop outlined the basics of rose pruning and provided indispensable techniques and highlighted the benefits of regular pruning in promoting the growth of vibrant, healthy roses.
The practical pruning sessions were led by proficient gardening personnel, ensuring participants could gain hands-on knowledge without jeopardizing the fragile plants. Participants were able to apply their newfound wisdom and learn from their mistakes under the watchful eyes of the experts.
The inaugural pruning workshop marks the beginning of more community-centric activities at Westridge Rose Garden, reflecting the mutual dependency between nature and society. As the garden continues to bloom and prosper, it does so in symbiosis with the local community.
Durbanville Rose Garden is already looking forward to reinstating their own workshop in the coming year, hinting at promising potential for future alliances between the two green havens.
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