Showing posts with label #LetsTalkFlowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #LetsTalkFlowers. Show all posts

Jul 9, 2013

Now that’s a Croc! Crocosmia that is...





“Now that’s a Croc!” 

crocosmia field, July 2013
JW Brown inspecting our crocosmia crop.
When this was shouted at me across a flower field the other day, I was a bit startled as I turned to look, and then I smiled. Out in the sweeping field of red was one of our National Sales Reps, JW Brown, holding up a remarkable crocosmia bloom. The flower showed a fiery red contrast to the surrounding coastal environment, matched only by JW’s 49ers shirt.  We grow the variety “Lucifer”, which is a rather appropriate name for this saturated red bloom.

singel strem crocosmia
A single crocosmia stem
Crocosmia leaves are sword shaped, and the flowers are branched spikes, they sort of look like a freaky freesia. We sell them both in bloom, and then as “pods” which have a great visual appeal for designers. 

 
'Crocosmia' is derived from the Greek words 'krokos' meaning saffron and 'osme' meaning smell. It is said that when the flower heads are put into water that they smell of saffron. They are also used to make yellow dye. Crocosmia is originally from Africa and it is a member of the gladiolus and iris family. Crocosmia masoniorum was crossed with Antholyza paniculata (now C. paniculata) by Alan Bloom and produced a sturdy tall plant which was named 'Lucifer' in 1966.
harvesting crocosmia
Just picked crocosomia
Right now, we are harvesting a big swath of Lucifer, so it’s a good time to check out this unique crop. In the coming weeks, crocosmia pods will also be available. These are created by bringing bee hives out to the fields to pollinate the flowers, and this leads to outstanding rows of pods on the stems. 


just picked crocosmia pods
10 Stem bunches of pods
The only other crop which we use bees to pollinate is our Ilex crop, the majority of our flowers are cut and shipped before they open so the bees never get a chance to sneak in there and do their thing.

Bee Hives
Buzz, Buzz, Buzz
Another difference between crocosmia and our other crops is that we reuse the same bulbs for multiple years.  Each fall the bulbs are dug up, sorted, and then the best quality ones are replanted, or saved to be replanted at a later date to maintain steady production form mid-summer through fall.


Crocosmia is a dramatic, impressive flower, which adds a rich splash of color to any vase and it is a great summer flower.

crocosmia field, among the redwoods of Humboldt County, CA
Crocosmia with a light breeze off the Pacific

If you aren't familiar with Sun Valley's Resource Pages, check out these two, one for Crocosmia, one for Crocosmia Pods.  ...we have similar sheets for all our major crops. Have a look.

Grow with Lily, Sun Valley's Flower Talk Blog




Jul 2, 2013

Bouquet Diversity



Flower Fireworks!
Iris are perfect for 4th of July!
Recently, I took a few moments to just wander around the fields where I work, the Sun Valley Floral Farms. Looking around, the beautiful early summer flowers were blooming: irises, hydrangeas and greenhouses were brimming with tulips and lilies. I took notice of all the sizes and shapes of trucks, production lines and giant coolers. Then I thought to myself, look at all these team members – the most valuable assets of all. 

Flower Talk with Sun Valley
Horonato has worked at Sun Valley for years; his family is from the Machu Picchu region of Peru.
Sun Valley Floral Farms is so diverse. Where else but America would you get this amazing ethnic blend of people, all united in the complicated task of bringing California-grown flowers to the rest of the country? When you talk to the people who make their living planting, picking and packaging our flowers, you see that Sun Valley is a great example of the American melting pot. It’s like a beautiful bouquet of different skill sets, worldviews and dreams. And just like a bouquet, the people all complement each other.

We have team members that don’t just speak English and Spanish, but Dutch, Laotian, Chinese, Hmong, I-Kiribati, Indonesian, Flemish and we also have a guy from The Bronx, who speaks “New York.”  Lane DeVries, the CEO, realized years ago that a large majority of our team members on our Oxnard farm only spoke Spanish. So he and the rest of the team leaders learned Spanish themselves and now conduct the all-farm meetings in both Spanish and English. 

Tulips
Sales Rep. Laura Kurtz speaks four languages!
Work on any farm is hard. Yet, the people who work at Sun Valley are dedicated to something as pure and unpretentious as a delicate flower for you to enjoy in your home.  It is a bit humbling to see the work and effort that brings that flower from our hands to yours; this is the American Dream incarnate. 

The American Flag, on an American Farm
You find the Stars and Stripes all over our farm.
Right now there are teams out picking bright red tulips and matsumoto asters, fragrant white lilies and lisianthus to be combined with classic blue irises, all American-grown. To brighten up your 4thof July celebration, make sure to pick-up a Sun Valley Floral Farms red, white and blue bouquet. Then, sit down with your family and take a few moments to appreciate the great country we all share.
4th of July Flower Bouquet ideas
Lilies, Red Matsumotos, Eryngium and Bear Grass Bouquet
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Happy Independence Day!
Grow with Lily

Jun 18, 2013

How To Get 700 Tulips Into a Mini.

Take a cherry red convertible Mini and fill it with about 700 tulips. Which shines brighter: the dramatic tulips or the awesome vehicle?

mini cooper side view
Mini with tulips

Last year Sun Valley Floral Farm needed a “stop you in your tracks” display for the International Floriculture Exposition in Miami Beach.  Our Dutch designer Pieter Landman had a bold vision.  When he presented his vision of tulips bursting out of a convertible Mini during a creative sales meeting, everyone was kind of silent…waiting for the boss to react. We watched in anticipation as he mulled it over with his thick Dutch accent, 

“Ahhh, Hmmm, tulips?  In a car, ja?” 
 
Pieter Landman, a very flamboyant designer whose resume includes the flowers at Wimbledon, royal palaces and international fashion shows, throws is hands in the air,

“Not just a car! It’s a Mini, it’s perfect.  The color, the shape, we fill the whole thing with tulips, more colors than a rainbow, no one has seen this before!”

The boss says, “Ya, a Mini Cooper, aye?”

The head of sales, a California born surfer and flower industry pro quietly chimes in, “That'd be awwwwesome.”

The rest of the sales team is already making eye contact establishing the pecking order for who gets to drive first.  A sly smile starts to creep across the boss's face, as we watch him mentally warm up to the idea.
“Hmmm, Ahhhh, OK Pieter, let’s do it!”

Floral Designer Pieter Landman
Pieter Landman in action.
The unintentional cheers and high-fives from the sales team make for a quick uncomfortable silence as people suddenly feel self-conscious as they are knuckle bumping in the middle of the meeting.  The boss looks around as his staff tries to regain their composure, “Meeting adjourned, now get back to work” as he strides out of the office while trying to keep his own grin contained.

A month later, the head of marketing is now tasked with renting a Mini in South Florida.  She calls to make a reservation from California, and getting a little bit of sticker shock from just the cost to rentthe Mini, says, “Well, we aren’t really going to drive it any further than the convention hall, we are just using it as a display.” 
 
“What are you going to display,” asks the rental agent.

“Well, we are a flower farm and we are going to fill it with flowers” she replies.

“Flowers?   …in the Mini?  Mama, I don’t think we have a car for you to rent. Goodbye.” (Click)
Ever determined, she makes the rounds of all the luxury car dealerships and finally finds another red convertible Mini, of course for Pieter, It has to be red!  I overhear her explaining in her sweet southern accent that she is on vacation, just going to use the car to zip around town, no mention of work, conventions or tulips.
mini cooper dashboard with tulips
Mini dashboard with tulips

We land in Miami about midnight, and have asked the rental people to stay late so we can pick up the Mini, we have also rented a nondescript van for all our stuff.  As we leave the safety of the airport and start off into a dark industrial portion of Miami, far off the beaten path to locate the Mini rental place, I notice Jack locks all the van doors and is checking his mirrors a little too much.  We pull into a street that reminds me of a Miami Vice set, our intrepid Marketing Director hops out of the van with Anthony.  They walk into the open sliding door of a big garage.  A menacing looking guy (who was probably just upset he had to sit there until nearly 1 a.m. for us to pick up the car) talks with her a bit, his hands moving in expressive gestures. He starts up the car, revs the engine and in my imagination pulls out a brief case full of guns and cash, our Marketing Director makes the exchange, slides into the Mini, Anthony bounds over the door into the passenger seat. Jack slams the van into gear and we get back on the freeway as fast as we can.

Flowers in a car!
Mini with the top down.
The next day, we take the Mini over to the convention hall, we have already cleared it with the organization sponsoring the convention and expect to just drive the car right in, and park it at our booth.  Piece of cake.  
Enter the Union.  The Union has different rules and regulations than the convention center.  They let us know, that the car needs to have less than a quarter of a tank of gas, have the battery disconnected, and we need to hire a local Miami-Dade County fireman to keep an eye on the car 24 hours a day, to ensure against it catching fire.  A lot of string pulling, favor calling and other shenanigans commence, all to no avail.  The Union is not going to budge. The strategy session evolves as we wait for our other display materials to get unloaded from a long line of semis. 

The ideas flow,
  • Let’s syphon the gas out, a few calls to Pep Boys and a local gas station proves that with modern vehicles this is extremely hard to syphon gas, and illegal as well. 
  •  Let’s take the car to the hotel and pay the concierge a few bucks to leave the car idling outside the hotel for the next 8 hours or so.  Clicking away on smart phones, we learned a car burns between .4 to .6 gallons of gas in an hour at idol, the Mini has a full tank.
o   Maybe if we put a brick on the accelerator it would burn more gas?
  • Let’s make a huge contribution to the Union retirement fund.
  • Jack offers to take one for the team, “You guys can set up the display, and I’ll drive the car to Key West and back.”
  • Let’s redo the display and use a different type of vehicle, one without a motor.
    • How about a canoe?
    • How about a set of kayaks?
    • How about a rickshaw? (This would be sweet!)
    • Mountain bikes?
    • Beach crusiers?
    • A claw foot tub?      
  • Let’s try to return the car, and rent a different red convertible Mini with less gas in the tank.  (The call was made, no dice.)
  • Let’s leave the car idling outside the convention hall unlocked.  Without 2 keys, this seems like a great opportunity to have our display vehicle turned into a stolenvehicle.
  •  Let’s encourage the Union guys to figure a way to deal with it.  We send Jack out to the hot, loud industrial loading dock, saying in his best Jersey accent, “Whadda mean, yous can’t just take care a dis?”
  • Let’s drill a small hole in the gas tank and let the gas the drain out, then fill the hole with toothpaste when we are done.
  • Let's take the dashboard apart and disabling the gas gauge.
mini cooper tail lights.
Mini trunk, filled with flowers.
We set up the non-car elements of the display, it is a hot and sweaty affair since they don’t turn on the AC until after the show starts.  By 4 p.m. everybody is pretty tuckered out and the car situation is nowhere closer to being resolved. 
 
I see our Marketing Director grab the keys, “Alright Jack, go out and drive as much gas out of the car as you can.” His sunglasses, usually perched above his forehead, naturally pop down onto his eyes as he replies, “You got it, Boss.”

She points at me, “You go with him, and make sure he doesn’t do anything dumb.”

“Yes, Mama.”
Sun Valley at Miami Beach

Five minutes later Jack and I are rollin’ down famous Ocean Drive, top down, tunes bumpin’, pulling up alongside Ferraris and convertible Beemers.  Revving the engine like crazy, just to use up as much gas as possible.  Art deco architecture, palm trees, beautiful people, the Miami Vice soundtrack playing in my head. We wind out of Miami Beach, Jack pushing the accelerator down over the Julia Tuttle Causeway.  Now this is a fine day in the floral industry.
 
By now it is just approaching 5 p.m. and all of a sudden the soundtrack in my head comes to an abrupt halt, as Jack downshifts into a construction zone, which quickly becomes grid lock.  It’s about 95 degrees and super humid.  We are blasting the A.C. with the top down, to use up gas.   A dump truck is belching exhaust literally into my face in the low slung Mini. I-95 is a mess of traffic, orange cones and heavy machinery.  No girls in bikinis here, no Latin-techno music blasting out of bars, not a mojito insight, just grime and smoke.

An hour later we get into stop and go traffic, what a blessing.  And maybe another hour later, we break free of the traffic, and catch a stunning sunset rolling down the South Dixie Highway through Key Largo.
We stop for a picture, and turn the Mini around to drive back across the edge of the Everglades, racing as fast as we can, so we get the worst possible gas mileage, and hoping to still get late dinner.
Mini Cooper to Key Largo

The next morning our Marketing Director takes the Mini out for an early spin for a hundred miles or so, and we finally get the tank down to a quarter full. In case you’re wondering, this car gets about 44 miles to the gallon.
mini cooper with flowers
Sun Valley's Mini flower display
We pull it into the convention center, Pieter and the Sun Valley team burst into action, and a few hours later, the cherry red Mini Cooper has become the talk of the convention, and I realize you should wear sunscreen while in a convertible in Florida.
 
We are back in Miami this week, if you are coming to IFE, we will see you here.  If not, tune in next week to see what kind of trouble we were able to get into, and for another funny post about our last trip to Miami, read Tulip Credits.
Sun Valley's Flower talk blog

Jun 4, 2013

What to get the new neighbors???

Summertime is just about here, and in my neighborhood I’ve noticed a few new families have been moving in.  Summer is the time when families move, since schools wind down and vacation time can be used to get reestablished in a new community. I’m blessed to live in a pretty ideal neighborhood in northern California with wide sidewalks and neighbors who gossip over the fence about local goings-on.  Everyone’s yard is fairly tidy and we make a point of introducing ourselves to the new arrivals.
Sunflowers

This weekend a new family arrived on our block.  The moving truck pulled up as my wife and I were working in our vegetable garden. By late afternoon we were tired, yet wanted to welcome the new neighbors.  The thought of whipping up a batch of cookies or brownies was not a pleasant one, so my wife suggested flowers.  She zipped over to our local florist, getting there just before they closed and grabbed a great bouquet of California Grown flowers.  The Sun Burst Bouquet was all ready to go. It featured a big white Oriental Lily, bright Gerberas, Belladona, Lisianthus, Matsumoto Asters, a welcoming Sunflower and a host of fragrant greens including Solidago, Spiked Eucalyptus and Huckleberry.
The Sun Burst Bouquet from Sun Pacific Bouquet
  
As we walked over to meet the new neighbors we talked about how flowers are the perfect present for a new move in.  What if we had baked cookies and someone in the family was intolerant to gluten?  In today’s world people are more in touch with their health.  Are they on a special diet? Can they eat products with dairy?  Do they only eat organic?  With flowers, dietary restrictions aren’t an issue.

As we knocked on the door and were greeted by the new home owners, we saw pretty quickly that they had their work cut out for them.  The carpets were ripped up, the kitchen was being scrubbed with bleach and the stack of paint cans and supplies showed these folks would be working around the clock to get this house livable for their family.


Bringing a beautiful bouquet of flowers into this chaos was much appreciated.  The house smelled of cleanser, stuff was stacked in corners, and their teenage son was lugging in more boxes from the garage, looking less than thrilled.

“Oh, Flowers!” cheered the woman of the house, even though her clothes showed she had been cleaning, unpacking and sweating all day.  Her husband looked happy to have a few minutes reprieve from the work to meet his new neighbors, and quickly pointed me to the beer cooler, which he somehow knew would cement our friendship.

In all this, the flowers stood out as a symbol of the warm, loving household this house will become over the coming weeks.  The arrangement of the flowers also provided a little oasis of order among the stacks of boxes and furniture placed haphazardly around the house.  Since the flowers were already in a vase the new home owners, didn’t have to dig through boxes to find utensils, as they would have had to if we had baked a cake.

The wonderful scent of the Sun Valley Oriental Lily in the bouquet immediately changed the essence of the living room.  The strong scent of the Eucalyptus and Solidago cut through the smell of dust and mildew, lending a sweet scent of what is to become for this fixer upper.  The dark pink Gerberas and the radiant yellow Sunflower cut a sharp contrast to the stacks of corrugated cardboard boxes.
 
Malibu Gerbera and Black Eyed Sunflower
Malibu Gerbera and our Black-Eyed Sunflower
As we chatted with our new neighbors and found the connections we shared, two more kids came out of the woodwork to show us the treasures they had found in their new house.  The flowers were placed on the mantel over the fire place, beers were opened, and a friendship was made.  The flowers were a delightful message of welcome to the neighborhood and a sign of new beginnings.

Walking back to our house, I complemented my wife for thinking of bringing flowers. They really brought a level of elegance and hope to a chaotic situation, and did so effortlessly.  An old Dutch flower marketing campaign from the seventies said, “Flowers Like People.”  This great slogan really ran true last Saturday afternoon, so as you meet new friends and neighbors this summer make sure to have a bunch of flowers handy since they really are the perfect way to say, “Hello, nice to meet you.”
 
Flower Talk With Lily




May 28, 2013

The Great Gatsby at our Oxnard Farm

As The Great Gatsby splashes back onto the silver screen, a resurgence of roaring twenties style is afoot.  In homage to this renaissance, I headed out to our Oxnard farm with an eye towards the Art Deco style of the 1920's and cracked open the classic American novel again to revisit the tale of James Gatz, better known as Jay Gatsby, as told by narrator, Nick Carraway.

Roaring Twenties style flowers
Gerbera Daisy growing at Sun Valley Oxnard
 "He smiled understandingly-much more than understandingly. It was one of those rare smiles with a quality of eternal reassurance in it, that you may come across four or five times in life. It faced--or seemed to face--the whole external world for an instant, and then concentrated on you with an irresistible prejudice in your favor. It understood you just as far as you wanted to be understood, believed in you as you would like to believe in yourself."
- F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, Ch. 3


Black and White Brassica
Our Brassica, read more about it HERE


"A phrase began to beat in my ears with a sort of heady excitement: 'There are only the pursued, the pursuing, the busy, and the tired.'"
- F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, Ch. 4


Great Gatsby Flowers
Tending the crops

"they looked back at me, remotely, possessed by intense life."
- F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, Ch. 5

Great Gatsby flowers
Photogenic Greenball

"Can't repeat the past?... Why of course you can!"
- F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, Ch. 6

Great Gatsby Flowers
We have Lisianthus in stock.

"He knew that when he kissed this girl, and forever wed his unutterable visions to her perishable breath, his mind would never romp again like the mind of God. So he waited, listening for a moment longer to the tuning-fork that had been struck upon a star. Then he kissed her. At his lips' touch she blossomed for him like a flower and the incarnation was complete."
- F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, Ch. 6

Great Gatsby Lily
Our lilies shine through the ages.

"Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgiastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that's no matter--tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther.... And one fine morning-- So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past."
- F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, Ch. 9


Sun Valley's Flower Talk with Lily Blog