Where did the flower tradition start?
Flemington’s spectacular rose gardens are lovingly tended to all year round by Mick Ryan. It’s the largest rose garden you’ll find in the Southern Hemisphere and was first planted in the 1960s.
The elegant-coloured hues we see in bloom on each race day also nod to the colours you can wear each day. You’ll spot red roses at the entrance from Epsom Road, yellow at the Members’ Lawn and plenty of pink and coconut ice on the front lawns.
There are more than 16,500 roses in full bloom come October, requiring daily maintenance by Ryan and his team at Flemington.
Ryan has been working at Flemington as a gardener for 34 years, and attending just as many Melbourne Cups, too – ever watchful over the roses as they put their best petals forward for all to admire.
Pruning certainly can’t be done in a day or few weeks either. Ryan begins at the end of April and completes the pruning process by the second week of August and is monitoring their every blooming move until Cup Week arrives.
“It’s an intensive 17-week program to get the flowers blooming at the same time,” says Mick Ryan.
“It all comes down to the trained eye. We walk around and see what is early or late to bloom and change the day we do the pruning the following year. There’s an art and precision to it,” he says.
“The more work you put in, the more the roses will flower and give you a much better display. As tough as they are, they appreciate love and care and reward you with more flowers,” Ryan says.
Word has it that several committee member wives came up with the yellow rose tradition for Melbourne Cup when they suggested it to their husbands. The trend took off and remains in place today. While it’s not compulsory to wear one in your lapel, it’s a big day for florists who pin their hopes on selling plenty during race week. They are also sold trackside on each day.
“We’ve held onto the trend and more and more people started following it. It’s a nice touch for the day because flowers are a great conversation starter too,” Ryan says. “They look very elegant in a lapel.”
When Ryan started working at Flemington under the now retired gardener Terry Freeman there were 6000 roses on site. That has grown dramatically over the years, with Ryan hoping to plant a few thousand more in the next two years.
There are plenty of other ways to embrace the traditional rose and flower colours for each day at the races this year, too. If you’re hosting family and friends in the carparks or having a picnic on the front lawns, why not curate your décor with cornflower blue napery on Derby Day, a hint of red for Stakes Day and soft purple hues on Oaks Day. Or have some lapels in customary colours ready to go to get the celebration started.
Did you know?
The VRC is also generous with the floral arrangements used for decorations throughout the restaurants and hospitality venues at Flemington Racecourse. During the Melbourne Cup Carnival, these are donated to the nearby Royal Melbourne Hospital, with BlueCross also benefitting from the donated arrangements from other race days across the season.