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Breeder Interplant Roses; the journey from amateur to major global player

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This year, rose breeder Interplant Roses celebrates its 60th birthday! Throughout 2022 a number of events will be organized to mark this achievement. The first of these events was the launch, in mid january, of a new and informative company film. This family business, which began its journey in 1962, has in the last 60 years made an amazing transition from being just a couple of amateur enthusiasts, to becoming a major player in the world market of cut roses! Here is a quick overview of the decades of dedication it has taken to achieve success.

GP Ilsink, 2nd generation and Jurjen Ilsink 4th generation 1200

Pioneer in breeding

At the beginning of the sixties, a young Peter, 2nd generation of the Ilsink family, joined the business. He was even then not totally a beginner, as since his childhood, whenever his father and uncle were busy in the fields around Leersum selecting roses, he would be with them.

The way breeding was done then was very hit and miss. You just put a variety of plants next to each other, stood back and let nature take its course. Then you selected what you felt were the resulting best roses.

Peter felt that there was possibly a major future for the company in the cut rose business. But he was uncertain as how best to achieve this. So he decided to ask advice. He approached Ir. Van Doesburg, the director of the former test station in Aalsmeer. The two men came to a historical conclusion. There were plenty of spray carnations and spray chrysanthemums on the market but there were no sprayroses at all. The field was wide open. This could be the future!

Peter set up his own greenhouse so that he could carry out his own cross pollination trials. No one could have guessed, that this small green house of just 50 square meters, would be the start of a new and exiting business.

The transformation to professional breeder

The open letter stresses the importance of prior authorization by a title-holder for any use or sale of a protected variety, including cut flowers or any other part of plants. Plant material obtained from an unauthorized source constitutes a PBR infringement, both in the country where it is produced and the countries where it is sold. While the plants propagated or planted without authorization are illegal and can be uprooted, the harvested cut flowers are illegal as well and can be seized either at the

Interplant Roses becomes a success

What has been the major ingredients for Interplants success? Looking back over the last 60 years, Peter concludes that, in addition of course to his love for growing roses, a extraodinary dose of  imagination and above all lots of perseverance have been absolutely critical.

‘It is’, he says, ‘very important to be willing to dare to do things differently. You must have the courage to set new trends. You have to be and to remain creative. Finally, you must realise that todays success will not be tomorrows’.

It may seem to outsiders that success in this breeding business was just there for the taking.

‘That is totally untrue’, notes Peter. ‘Rose breeding is learning to put up with disappointment. If you cannot  handle disappointment, you are finished’, declares the spry eighty year old who, practically every day, can still be found making his rounds through the greenhouses. These have now grown to cover 2 hectares (5 acres) and are situated in Harmelen, just outside Utrecht, in The Netherlands.

Peter says he is not involved anymore in the day-to-day running of the nursery. He is very happy to have been able to hand that over to his sons Robert and Martijn. And now his grandson Jurjen, the fourth generation of Ilsinks has also joined the firm. When asked what he has learnt from his grandfather Jurjen is very brief: ‘stay focussed and never give up. If you give up to easy, you’ll never know how close you were’.

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