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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 29, 2026 Page 7 Saugus observed Memorial Day 2026 Kids on the curb at Veterans Park A three -gun salute by members of the World War II reenactors as Taps plays at Riverside Cemetery Amy Macauda, daughter of American Legion Post #210 Commander John Macauda, sang the National Anthem at Riverside Cemetery. THE KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Chaplain (Major) Scott McGowan of the U.S. Army National Guard. Flags marking the veterans’ graves at Riverside Cemetery Saugus Veterans Council Commander Steve Castinetti A Saugus hero remembered Saugus Gardens in the Spring Here’s what’s blooming in town this week to make your walks more enjoyable By Laura Eisener T here is plenty to enjoy in the garden this week. Tomorrow, May 30, is National Water a Flower Day. It is also the traditional date of Memorial Day, originally known as Decoration Day, since its purpose was to decorate the graves of Civil War soldiers with floral wreaths and bouquets. The name changed to Memorial Day as it became a day to remember all those who died in military service, and observances included ceremonies and other activities in addition to the placing of flowers on the graves. One hundred years after it was first observed in 1868, the date was changed to the last Monday in May. We have a blue moon to look forward to on Sunday! The first full moon of the month was May 1, and we will be finishing out the month with a second full moon. Of course that means we will have to be very patient waiting to observe the full moon of June, often called the strawberry moon. The floral symbol of the Saugus Garden Club is the iris, blooming in its glory this week. There are 300 different iris species, and breeders have produced thousands of varieties. But the club’s logo shows a bearded iris. About 40-50 iris species fall into this category. The “beard” is a fuzzy looking line of trichomes, which serves as a nectar guide, leading pollinators down inside the blossom, and also working very efficiently to brush pollen off as the bees move about within the flower. These irises are among the oldest garden flowers, and hybridization began before the current system of botanical nomenclature was established. It is not always clear what the ancestors of some iris varieties were, or even what countries were actually their native range, although most are from Eurasia. Iris flowers have a distinctive form in which there are 6 colorful parts that many websites call petals, but botanists would call them tepals. This term is used when petals and sepals are very similar. As with tulips 3 of them are actual petals and the 3 slightly lower ones are sepals. Unlike the tulip flower, in which they all curve upward, in iris they take 2 forms: The petals point upward and are called standards, while the 3 sepals droop downward or outward and are known as falls. In previous centuries, the standards were often called “sails.” The ancient Greek goddess of the rainbow was known as Iris, and this is the origin of the plant’s name. Wherever she walked, flowers supposedly sprang from the ground. Iris flowers bloom in almost every color of the rainbow. ‘Firebreather’ iris is a bright orange with a deeper orange beard. (Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener) In Saugus, bearded irises usually bloom in late May and early June. Some white ones in my garden have been blooming now for about a week, bent down by the weight of Pure white ‘Immortality’ iris is blooming now and will rebloom in fall. (Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener) water in last Sunday’s rain, but now propped up and still blooming well. These are the GARDENS | SEE PAGE 12

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