

On a small road called Happy Hollow lives a woman known to all as Hosta Sue, my dear friend for the past thirty years. Sue is a woman of simple pleasures, shunning the distractions of modern technology in favor of a life rich with nature’s bounties. She is firm in her opinions, her words never veiled, but always delivered with a heart full of kindness and a mind full of wisdom.
Our weekly discourses, though centered on the most unassuming aspects of life, are a source of immense joy and profound reflection. Sue’s passion for growing hostas is unparalleled; she tends to her garden with a devotion that transforms it into a haven of beauty. Each hosta she cultivates is unique, much like Sue herself, whose individuality shines through in every aspect of her life. Her love for animals is equally boundless, and her home is a sanctuary for creatures great and small.
Despite her occasional gruffness, Sue’s abode is ever a place of warmth and welcome. Her presence commands respect and affection, and her counsel, though straightforward, is a beacon of clarity in the fog of life’s uncertainties. It is her nature to speak plainly, to dispense with artifice, and this I treasure above all else.
Sue’s modest dwelling is often filled with the hum of friendly concern, as neighbors and friends seek her out, drawn by the strength and sincerity of her character. She is a constant in our lives, a pillar of stability and grace, and her unvarnished truths are a source of comfort and guidance. All who cross her path glimmer with a smile, their lives momentarily brightened by the brief interactions of distraction in an otherwise busy world.
As I navigate the responsibilities and trials that life presents, I find myself often reflecting on Sue’s wise words and steadfast spirit. She knows just what to say, her advice as direct as it is compassionate. Her legacy of simplicity, honesty, and profound love for the natural world continues to inspire and guide me.
Hosta Sue, my dear and cherished friend, you hold a place in my heart that time cannot erase. You are not only a companion but a mentor and a kindred spirit. Our shared moments, filled with laughter and understanding, are memories I shall always hold dear. Your presence is a source of solace and strength.
May your garden forever bloom, and may your unique spirit continue to shine brightly in the lives of those fortunate enough to know you.
Sue was the devoted wife of the late Timothy S. Reuwer; beloved mother of Robin Carlson-Carter; loving sister of Edith Holt Bloodgood Hellmers, and Joseph Holt Bloodgood. Sue will continue to bloom and live in the many Gardens she helped to create.
The family will receive friends in the Lemmon Funeral Home of Dulaney Valley, Inc. 10 W. Padonia Road (at York Road) Timonium, Maryland 21093 on Wednesday, June 5, 2024 from 3pm to 7pm with lite refreshments for Sue’s Garden Party "PRT".
Sue’s life will be celebrated at the funeral home on Thursday, June 6, 2024 at 11am.
Interment Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens.
In lieu of flowers, expressions of sympathy may be directed in Sue’s memory to The Wild Hearts Animal Sanctuary at https://www.thewildhearts.org/ and/or "BARCS" 2490 Giles Road, Baltimore, Maryland 21225 and/or Phoenix Wildlife Center, P.O. Box 424, Phoenix, Maryland 21131
Baltimore Sun Obituary
Roberta P. “Sue” Bloodgood, whose vast inventory of hostas, daylilies and ornamental grasses made her Cockeysville nursery the destination for area gardeners, died of cancer May 28 at her Happy Hollow Road home. She was 81.
“We first met her 30 years ago,” said Stiles T. Colwill, who owns an interior decorating firm.
“We drove to Happy Hollow for the first time and here was this woman walking an IV drip on wheels because she had Lyme disease and then jumped in with it all into a golf cart,” Mr. Colwill said, with a laugh. “I thought, what otherworldly experience have we located? When they made Sue Bloodgood, they broke the mold.”
Colin Kness was not only a longtime friend and neighbor, but also a customer.
Subtitles Off
“She lived the perfect ’60s lifestyle. She had no cellphone, iPad, computer or internet. She’d sit at the table with only a calculator,” Mr. Kness said. “I’m in IT, and she always called me the ‘Cloud Guy.'”
Roberta Page Bloodgood, daughter of Joseph Holt Bloodgood, a chemist, and Isabel Bloodgood, a Lord Baltimore Hotel administrative assistant, was born in Baltimore and spent her early years on Berkshire Road in Arcadia, near Herring Run Park.
When she was 16, she and her family moved to Happy Hollow Road in Cockeysville.
Her paternal grandfather was Dr. Joseph Colt Bloodgood, an internationally known surgeon who was also head of the Johns Hopkins laboratory of surgical pathology and chief surgeon at what is now Ascension Saint Agnes Hospital.
Ms. Bloodgood never used her first name.
“Her grandmother called her ‘Sue’ and it stuck,” said her daughter, Robin Carlson-Carter, of Mays Chapel.
Roberta P. “Sue” Bloodgood enjoyed sewing and rescuing animals. (Handout)
She was a 1960 graduate of Notre Dame Preparatory School in Towson but did not attend college.
“She cared for her mother, who was an invalid. She always did things like that for others,” her daughter said.
When a neighbor, Timothy S. Reuwer, became concerned when developers moved in, he asked whether he could move his plants to her beautiful garden.
“That’s how it all began in the late 1970s,” Ms. Carlson-Carter said. “They had so many hostas and daylilies, they started selling them from a card table outside of her house. She was extremely knowledgeable about plants.”
Mr. Reuwer, an artist, relocated his studio to Ms. Bloodgood’s home, and they were together for 30 years and married for a decade until his death in 2012.
The couple’s nursery business expanded to more than 4 1/4 acres and was filled with more than 250 varieties of hostas, perennials and ornamental grasses, and more than 1,200 types of daylilies.
As they say in the restaurant business, Ms. Bloodgood worked the front of the house while her husband was busy in his nursery grounds studio.
Dressed in her trademark colorful muumuus and waving an ever-present cigarette, Ms. Bloodgood would jump into her golf cart, gun it, and advise customers to follow.
“She was just like the comedian Totie Fields,” Mr. Colwill said, referring to the entertainer who died in 1978.
Customers anointed her with the moniker of “Hosta Sue.”
“Despite her occasional gruffness, Sue’s abode is ever a place of warmth and welcome. She is firm in her opinions, her words never veiled, but always delivered with a heart full of kindness and a mind full of wisdom,” Mr. Kness wrote in an email.
“Her presence demands respect and affection, and her counsel, though straightforward, is a beacon of clarity in the fog of life’s uncertainties. It is her nature to speak plainly, to dispense with artifice.”
“Some people become addicted to hostas,” Ms. Bloodgood told The Sun in 1997. “We have customers who carry lists of their hostas with them so they won’t buy the same one again.”
Despite being ill, Ms. Bloodgood was still active in the business, which she continued to operate with her daughter, and remains open.
“She was slightly depressed, but when she started ordering this spring, she perked up,” Ms. Carlson-Carter said. “I had her sit by her desk by the window and called her quality control. I still call in through that window seeking her advice.”
When she wasn’t busy with her nursery, she enjoyed sewing, crocheting, and rescuing animals.
“She was a homebody,” her daughter said.
“She’d rescue anything that walked,” Ms. Carlson-Carter said. “One time we were picking beans up near the Pennsylvania line, and someone drove up in a truck and threw a goat off of it. She said, ‘Get that goat,’ and we put it in the car and drove it home. The poor thing kept going to the bathroom all over the car, but she didn’t care, and we laughed all the way home.”
Mr. Colwil recalled inviting her for a swim on a warm summer’s day and she said she didn’t have a bathing suit but would wear a muumuu instead.
“When she got into the pool, the muumuu got wet and floated over her head like a large parachute,” Mr. Colwill said, with a laugh, adding, she was good-natured about the experience and took it in stride.
When she was in the hospital, she asked her daughter to take her back to her Happy Hollow home.
“I put her in the dining room so she could look at her flowers. And her flowers will forever bloom in others’ gardens, which means she’ll always be alive,” Ms. Carlson-Carter said.
It was Ms. Bloodgood’s wish that her life be celebrated with a garden party with family and friends and light refreshments.
“We’ll have flowers from her garden there,” her daughter said.
The garden party gathering will be held from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Lemmon Funeral Home at 10 W. Padonia Road in Timonium.
In addition to her daughter, Ms. Bloodgood is survived by a brother, Joseph Holt Bloodgood, of Freeland, and a sister, Edith Holt Bloodgood Hellmers, of Cockeysville.
Written by Fred Rasmussen
DONATIONS
The Wild Hearts Animal Sanctuary
BARCS 2490 Giles Road , Baltimore, Maryland 21225
Phoenix Wildlife Center P.O. Box 424 , Phoenix, Maryland 21131
SHARE OBITUARY
v.1.11.0