Showing posts with label Arcata. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arcata. Show all posts

Jun 14, 2016

Z-Calla Photo Freak Out

Calla Lily Season (or, as we call them, Z-Callas) is in full effect! Both our Oxnard and Arcata Farms are bursting with color and looking great.  I think I may have fallen in love with a hoop house.

Zantedeschia Z-calla growing
Z-callas ready to be picked

I did some walking around with the camera in order to capture the magical growth that is happening. Now, I share this eye candy with you.  Enjoy!

Some Z-Calla Varieties:

maroon purple zantedeschia z-calla lily
Dark Maroon Calla beginning to unfurl

vermeer calla lily
Vermeer Z-callas
morning sun z-calla zantedeschia calla lily
Morning Sun Z-Calla
white zantedeschia calla lily
Captain Ventura Z-Calla

yellow z-calla lily
Gold Medal Z-Calla
pink z-calla zantedeschia calla lily
Royal Princess Z-Calla

Z-Calla Hoop Houses:


z-calla lilies growing in hoops

how to grow zantedeschia

yellow calla lilies growing
Yellow Calla Madness

purple zantedeschia
Buckets of Blooms
Hope you enjoyed the walk through our World of Color; and don't worry, there's plenty to share!

Lady Aster Photos






Mar 12, 2014

Spring Abounds, Better Hold On.

It would be just like spring in California
To know your love would be mine
             from the song "Take Me" performed by Jerry Garcia and David Grisman.

Early spring on a California flower farm is something to behold. Having farms at both ends of the state, Sun Valley has two very different micro-climates happening right now, and both are going off.

Arcata

Looking out my window in Arcata, the wind is blowing a big wet storm in from the south west.  The hoop houses that are brimming with French Tulips and Hyacinth are shaking in the steady breeze. Clouds are moving fast across the horizon, sometimes dropping a quick deluge of rain, other times surprising everyone with a burst of sun.

California flower farm
Our Arcata Farm
Right now you hear constant reports of the California drought, and though the rain started later than usual this year, our farm nestled on the redwood of Humboldt County is on it's way to normal precipitation for the year. We added another couple inches over the weekends, and one decent sized earthquake Sunday night. 6.9 on the Richter Scale, with no damage on the farm.

This early spring time is a keeping our growers and picking team really busy. The French Tulip harvest is stunning. Our Frenchies are the giants of the tulip world, the blooms are as big as a coffee cup and the colors are rich as King Midas himself.

Pink Pride French Tulips
Our "Pink Pride" French Tulip.

Oxnard

Oxnard traditionally starts to really warm up as we get through March. Right now their highs are in the mid-70's. Over the last few weeks they've had a few drenching rains, which have spurred our big Iris and Matsumoto Aster crops on to new heights. As it warms up more in the coming weeks our Lily harvest will be moving back to Arcata where it will remain until the fall.

I asked GerritVanderkoy, our head grower in Oxnard, what was happening on the farm. 

"The recent rain we received was a welcome sight, we can always use more."

Growing Iris in spring
He continued, "Our iris love this spring weather, the crop is coming in really nice, as are our Matsumoto Asters. Right now the flowers we grow outside are looking especially strong."

(Check out this 1 minute video on our Matsumotos from the Field in Focus Series.)

I asked what other crops are enjoying the spring weather,

"We are picking a lot of Matricaria and Freesia, and our Delphinium varieties really like the spring weather, it's growing in leaps and bounds." 

Sun Valley excels at a several things. Team work, year-round flower production  and cold chain management to name just a few. However, every year when spring rolls around and the flowers take advantage of Mother Nature's generosity; with the perfect blend of rain, sun, clouds and warmth, it is impressive to see flowers nearly leaping from the soil, reaching for the sky and growing fast.

flower variety from Sun Valley.
Spring abounds!
This is the time of year when flower growing looks easy. We work in concert with Mother Nature and direct traffic as the flowers take off on their own initiative. Better hold on.     



Nov 19, 2013

Paying It Forward With Flowers



“I used to jog but the ice cubes kept falling out of my glass.”
                                                                        Dave Lee Roth of Van Halen - 1979

As we careen into the holiday season just about every business is looking to make the next six weeks really count. Retail stores will be jammed, grocery stores will be packed and a table at your favorite restaurant may be tough. As Thanksgiving approaches the party circuit starts as well, when did the weekend before Thanksgiving become “the” weekend to throw a shindig?  Oh well, time to saddle up, assign designated drivers and ride into the parties…we’ll see you again late afternoon on January first.

A great friend of mine and fellow blogger Linda Stansberrysent me a note about a recent experience as a non-drinker in the season of eggnog, single malts and “Celebrator Ales.” It started as she was hosting a small get together at her cute cabin in the redwoods outside Arcata, CA. A friend called at the last minute asking if she could bring anything.  Linda was just having an epiphany that she was going to run out of Parmesan cheese, so she requested a wedge and went back to cooking.

Thirty minutes later her friend arrived, not just with the cheese but with a great bunch of flowers. The bunch was a simple consumer bunch of tulips and iris from the same market that sold the cheese. It was a very thoughtful item to ensure she didn’t show up with just the cheese and she didn’t want to bring the usual bottle of wine to a non-drinkers home.

bouquet of iris and tulips
Red Tulips and Blue Iris from Sun Valley
The flowers were an unexpected delight and Linda was thrilled to get a warm burst of color for her cozy home.  Since tulips respond so quickly to a warm room, she and her guests were actually able to watch the tulips dance and move throughout the leisurely northern California style dinner.
 
The party came off without a hitch, and when Linda woke up the next morning the iris had opened and looked spectacular.  It was one of those sweet gifts made even sweeter by their spontaneity.

iris opening and red tulips
Red Tulip and Iris opening.
The next evening it was Linda’s turn to be a guest at another friend’s party. This wasn’t dinner, it was later, with a band and hopefully some dancing.  Linda was in a dilemma, do you bring a bottle of wine or a 6 pack of micro-brew, even though you don’t drink? Then it struck her, FLOWERS!

asters, lilies and brassica bouquet
Purple Passion bouquet from  Sun Pacific Bouquet
Linda arrived about nine o’clock with a beautiful west coast style bouquet of local flowers. The party was just starting to get rolling and the hostess was thrilled as Linda presented the colorful bouquet.  Ironically, the hostess popped the bouquet in an over-sized mason jar and used it to dress up the table holding the wine bottles and glasses.
 
After a night of dancing and fun Linda was on her way out, she looked back over her shoulder at the wine bar area.  All the bottles were empty, but the flowers had held their beauty all night, and certainly would continue to shine throughout the week.

Oriiental Lilies and Telstar iris from Sun Valley
Ories and Iris, a lovely combo.
Arcata is a pretty small town, nestled between the Pacific Ocean and the giant redwoods, our flower girl Linda woke up Sunday to an empty fridge, over the next few hours she made her way to coffee, breakfast and the grocery store to pick up a few items.  In the store, she bumped in to the hostess from the night before, with a beautiful Oriental lily bouquet cradled in her shopping basket. She was on her way to visit her parents, and the grand idea of bringing flowers had just occurred to her.

Flower Talk with Lily

Apr 2, 2013

Tulip Adventure in the Redwoods



Hyperion is the name of the tallest tree on earth; it is also the tallest living organism and is in the running for the absolute largest life on earth.  Just 40 miles or so from the Sun Valley Farm in Arcata, this tree has been living for about the last 750 years.  The sprawling redwood forests of Humboldt County are an amazing eco-system and are among the wonders on the United Nation World Heritage List.
 
So what was happening in 1260’s?  Kublai Khan was taking charge of the Mongol Empire, the Crusades were in full swing, Marco Polo was on his way to present day China, the Middle Ages consumed Europe in war and this tree was just a little sapling.

Giants among Giants

I was given the assignment of heading into the redwood forest with a big bucket of our Redwood Grove French Tulips. I wasn’t able to take them to Hyperion, since to prevent vandals and damaging the surrounding eco-system, only a handful of people know where the tree is exactly located.

I chose the Arcata Community Forest as a beautiful, yet close spot I could go on a back to nature photo shoot.  French Tulips have been a staple of spring for decades; the Single Late bulbs grow the tallest, largest, most dramatic tulips on the market.  You are probably familiar with the Menton, Sauturness and Grand Amore, these classics grow in the pastels of spring.

Recently though, the French Tulip market has been turned on its head.  Enter the “Pride Series” and the “Honor Series.”  These French tulips are bold, bright and stunningly big.  Red, orange, purple, pink and apricot colors are coming in from the fields right now.  Sun Valley has the United States exclusive to grow these tulips.  The breeder only grants permission to one grower per tulip producing nation to grow their tulips, and lucky for you, Sun Valley is it!

April, 2 2013 French Tulips

We only have a limited number of bulbs, so this is a limited crop. However, they are coming in strong right now.  (Hint, Hint!)  Next year we anticipate have a larger crop, so start wrapping your head around the fact that the French Tulip market is in the midst of a sea change toward big bright tulips to compliment the pastels you are familiar with.

We call our French Tulips “Redwood Grove” because they share many of the characteristics with the redwoods. Compared to normal trees, the redwoods are epic.  Hyperion is 379.1 feet tall, which is over 37 stories in a building.  While standard Sun Valley tulips reach about 14-20 inches, our French tulips start at 22 inches and reach much higher.  Right now we are picking some at 28+. And like all tulips, they continue to grow in the vase.
Pink Pride Tulip
Pink Pride~ Now that's a TULIP!
  The redwoods and tulips actually thrive in the very same climate.  Damp and chilly with an even light level is just perfect.  Looking east from the farm to Liscom Hill and Fickle Hill the dense green of redwood foliage matches the rich green foliage of our Frenchies.

Redwood Forest with Tulips

I was on Fickle Hill in the Arcata Community Forest on an ideal day for photography.  The light was cascading gently through the canopy almost like putting a spotlight on my bouquet.  I used a simple yet elegant vase and loaded it with as many colors as I could find in the cooler. Trudging into the forest with a white 5 gallon bucket stuffed with tulips, vase, tripod, and camera was no easy feat.   More than a couple joggers did a double take, staring at me as some sort of serious flower power hippie coming up the trail, this is not an uncommon thing in Arcata.

Don't slip off a mossy log!

Once I reached the ridge with a nice view down into Jolly Giant Creek, I set to work finding the right light and setting up the tulips. The photos don’t show it, but it is actually very hard to find a flattish spot to set up a vase.  I can vouch that these tulips are tough; on more than a couple occasions I set up the vase among the redwood duff and ferns, then tip toed back to the camera on the tripod, only to look through the viewfinder and not see any tulips as the whole vase had slid off the mossy spot I had them balanced, whoopsie!   The shoot took about an hour until my bucket of tulips and I was exhausted.

Sun Valley in Arcata, California


I walked downhill to the trail head, again playing the role of flower power super hippie.  The mighty redwoods have an uncanny way of enveloping you in their essence; our French tulips have this same effect… make sure you get to experience them both.
Sun Valley's Flower Talk Blog

Oct 23, 2012

Our Tulips Know No Season

Like the heart, our Tulips know no season.

In Persia, to give a red tulip was to declare your love. The black center of the red tulip was said to represent the lover's heart, burned to a coal by love's passion. To give a yellow tulip was to declare your love hopelessly and utterly.

If I am madly in love and it’s spring, this is no problem since everyone knows springtime is traditionally tulip time. However, the heart knows no season and people fall in love year round. How then, to give your love a bouquet of stunning tulips as a symbol of your affection in mid-October?

Wolrd Favorite variety of Tulip
Perfect for Fall, our "World's Favorite" variety.
Instead of heading to the chocolate isle or worse yet, the greeting card isle, talk to your flower specialist about Sun Valley's Fall Tulips. Fall tulips? Wait, I thought tulips only bloomed in spring, with rows and rows of dramatic color and the occasional windmill sticking up on the horizon.

Au contraire, mes amants tulipes.

Enter Sun Valley’s Fall Tulip Program. We plan ahead to offer classic tulip varieties year round, especially in the fall and holiday times, when tulips are as rare as true love itself. How do we work this magic? What kind of voodoo are we practicing to bring a huge variety of high quality, colorful tulips to market? No magic, no voodoo. Just a bunch of innovative tulip lovers who know how to trick nature, ever so slightly.

Historically, the Dutch found a great climate for tulips in New Zealand, this was to grow them for markets in Australia and other regions of the southern hemisphere with a traditional spring harvest. Since the seasons are reversed down under, this is where the opportunity grew to offer tulips in the fall for the northern hemisphere. New Zealand is known primarily for their sheep, dairy production and of course, as the backdrop to the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy.  New Zealand also produces a fair amount of tulips, and luckily at Sun Valley we are very close with some of these Kiwis.

Sun Valley purchases bulbs for our fall tulips in New Zealand and they ship by boat to Oakland, where they get loaded on a truck and brought north to Humboldt County. We have worked with our partners in New Zealand to ensure the perfect fall color mix. When we first started producing southern hemisphere tulips, we found that we couldn't get the fall colors we needed, such as the warm oranges and rich reds.  We took the initiative, and sent bulbs south to help our partners create the seasonal varieties and colors needed to satisfy our customers.
Tulip Bulbs at Sun Valley Floral Farm
Bulbs waiting to be planted in soil, and our tulip grower Antoon Volwater inspects the development of a bulb.

They arrive in springtime on huge pallets, then we check for the proper bulb development.  Next we plant these in soil, staying true to Sun Valley’s mantra that “Soil Grown” tulips offer the best color, size, vase life and overall quality. Once the bulbs are in the soil, we place them in the “rooting cooler.” This environment simulates early spring with a temperature hovering in the mid 40’s F and we add a lot of moisture to the air to mimic nature. As the roots start to climb out of the bottom of the crate, we know they are getting established.

Sun Valley Fall Tulips
Roots growing out of the bottom of the soil crate, and the tiny beginnings of a tulip.

As roots form and a greenish yellow sprout starts to poke up from the soil, we move them to a much colder environment, closer to 32 degrees F. This colder cooler arrests their development and creates a happy hibernation with bulbs full of kinetic energy, waiting to go.

Having the coolers full of these tulips gives us amazing control. With great accuracy we can provide the colors and varieties our customers need. We also bring them out into the greenhouse in a staggered rotation that allows us to offer these tulips throughout the season, with no lapses in production.

Soil grown Fall Tulips from Sun Valley
Southern Hemisphere Ad Rem tulips that have been in the green house only 1 day, and the beautiful result.
In Arcata, our temperate climate allows tulips to grow just like it is spring time in New Zealand, minus the sheep. The amount of daylight is similar to spring and our greenhouses teeming with color are a cheerful contrast to autumn.

Just down the road from the farm, some industrious farmers have a corn maze and a pumpkin patch, all those oranges and browns of fall meeting among gourds and scarecrows. We on the other hand, are surrounded by the feeling of spring as much as we desire. Strolling through the greenhouses it is tough to know what season it really is. Offering such classic tulip varieties as Il de France, Ad Rem and Leen van der Mark Sun Valley is able to Create a World of Color even as the rest of the northern hemisphere's colors fade with in Autumn. 

Eddie Vedder of the seminal rock band Pearl Jam wrote, "Hearts and thoughts they fade, fade away."

Perhaps he should have given our fall tulips instead?




Sep 11, 2012

Navigating The Farm By Bike

“Where is the brassica growing?”


I thought this was a simple enough question, however, the answer was pretty complicated and a little dangerous. On our Farm it is pretty tough to walk out through the greenhouses and hoop houses and find one variety or species without some guidance from the growers, the pickers or anyone else with an idea of where a certain stand of flowers may be. The growers can tell you with pinpoint accuracy where a crop is but interpreting their instruction can be part of the challenge.

“Brassica? You want Corgy White, Bright Wine or Crane Rose?” answers Grower Tim.

Picking the variety with the coolest sounding name I answer with confidence, “Bright Wine.”

“Ok, go out to 9th Street, 9th Street West, not East. Go down to about 944 and it is about half way down in the hoop.”

I act like this jargon means something, thank him and walk away. Behind my back I hear, “You’re not gonna walk all the way out there are you? Take a bike.”

Beach Cruisers on the Flower Farm
Bikes on the farm

“Oh, which one?” I ask as I look over a collection of beaten up, but functional farm bikes. The grower points to a faded green one, “Take mine.”

I hesitate just long enough to get the question every adult who loves to mountain bike never wants to hear.

“You know how to ride a bike, right?”

“Ahh, yeah of course, nothing to it.” Thinking,  I know how to ride a bike why am I so nervous?

I hop on the once sweet beach cruiser with a basket on the front handlebars and take a few good pedals to get up to speed.  I feel Tim’s eyes on my back, as if the verdict is still out on whether I know how to ride a bike or not. Just at that moment a fork lift comes whipping around a parked delivery truck, beeping his horn to make sure he doesn’t collide with any one.

Who “yields” in this situation? I know on the water the vessel with the most control yields, such as a power boat yields to a sailboat. In this situation, my own sense of self-preservation slams back on the coaster brake, pebbles fly and I am back to standing astride a bike with a cloud of dust swirling around me, having gone all of 15 feet.

Grower Tim yells back over the forklift’s grumble, “Look out for forklifts!” and he returns to his clip board with crop calendars and planting schedules. I thank him for this gem of knowledge, remount the bike, give it a good shove (steady, steady) and pedal off in hopes of finding the “Bright Wine” Brassica, at this point I consider pedaling to a local cafĂ© for an actual glass of wine.

Arcata is a bicycle friendly community, I would say more than just friendly, there are some real bicycle nuts here.  The Kinetic Grand Championship is an annual race of pedal powered vehicles, which need to be able go across (or through) pavement, sand, mud, open water and many other hazards. Start planning for Memorial Day 2013 to be a part of a wonderful spectacle, started right here in Humboldt County.

Bicycling in and out of the greenhouses, across fields and down dirt roads is a great way to get around. The farm is big! The farm is so big, we actually need street signs just like any other community. Cruising down Tulip Avenue leads you right to a mechanical door at the entrance of a greenhouse. Once you are comfortable on your ride, you can pull a string about 10 feet before the door, the door magically opens and you pedal right through. The street signs help you navigate through the rows of lilies, iris and tulips.

Tulip Avenue, Iris Street,
Street signs on the Farm.
I zoom past West 7th street, and sure enough West 9th Street appears on the right. I ring my handlebar bell, in the faint hope that if a forklift is coming the other way we may avoid a collision. I go past row after row of Asiatic Lilies, then the crops start getting different, some freesia, some basil (don’t ask…), some yellow iris, then suddenly I hit the brassica…right where Tim said it would be. All I needed to do was find it.

Bright Wine Brassica
West 9th Street, home of the Brassica.
I take some beautiful photos of this unique crop, the Bright Wine is really a neat plant, so much texture and personality.

I head back to the office, taking a different route through the farm going past the blazing fields of crocosmia, enjoying the freedom and speed only a bicycle can provide. Pumping my legs, the wind in my hair, leaning over the handle bars for the least amount of drag, feeling great! I pull up to the office, just as Grower Tim is coming out. I slam on the brakes, kick out the back wheel, and skid to a perfect stop.  Then gracefully hop off the bike and stand in flawless form like any 11 year old would proudly do.

Grower Tim rolls his eyes, grabs the handle bars away from me, tosses his planting schedules in the front basket, mounts the bike and pedals away slowly, shaking his head.

"See...   I can ride a bike," I call out after him.





Aug 28, 2012

The Scoop on Antiqued Hydrangeas

“A dead hydrangea is as intricate and lovely as one in bloom. Bleak sky is as seductive as sunshine, miniature orange trees without blossom or fruit are not defective; they are that.”
                                                                                                           -Toni Morrison



While visiting my grandmother in Fair Lawn, New Jersey as a young boy, I never quite appreciated her Antiqued Hydrangeas. “Pompa” as we called her was an amazing gardener. On the shady side of her house, away from her rose and tulip beds, were a couple big hydrangeas. One was the classic white and the other had blossoms that varied from blue to pink and purple. Perhaps she was putting aluminum sulphate in the soil to influence the colors? More than likely, since though you couldn’t tell from outward appearances, Pompa was very much interested in the science of gardening.

We would usually visit her in mid-July on a typical summer vacation road trip, our whole family packed in the car for the drive down from Rhode Island. She would have great big cut hydrangea arrangements on her upright piano, and on her fireplace mantel. Usually the stems were placed in a thick chunky cut glass vase. The white and blue contrast really brightened up her modest living room.

Our family would usually return to share Thanksgiving with Pompa, since my grandfather, Rudolph, had passed away years before. I recall walking into her living room thinking, “Jeez, Pompa hasn’t changed the flowers since last time we were here.” As a child, I must have totally missed the fact that these, weren’t the same blooms, they were one of the most desired flowers in the industry, the Antiqued Hydrangea.

Two Antiques, our Hydrangeas and Pompa's copy of "Garden Flowers in Color" which she purchased in 1951.

Antiquing is the process where a blossom loses it's bold summer color and fades into a mellow rainbow of different tones, shades and hues. No two antiques are the same, each waning in its own special way. At this point most flowers wilt and die, hydrangeas miraculously keep their form and shape, and reinvent themselves for another season.

How does one “antique” a hydrangea? Does this take some special treatment or training? The simple truth is that an antiqued hydrangea blossom is left on the branch and naturally reaches this unique look, nothing but Mother Nature at work here. That said, there are some conditions at our farm in Arcata, California that make for exceptional hydrangeas, which in turn leads to exceptional antiques.


Look at the different colors on just one bush.

In late August, the days get shorter, and the air gets a little drier and chillier here on the Pacific coast. These atmospheric changes precipitate the change in the plant. You will find that hydrangeas grown closer to the equator don’t antique with the same impressive results as ours do, since their day light and weather patterns stay very constant.

Sun Valley can say without exaggeration that we grow some of the largest hydrangea on the market; this is due to our Hydrangea team's expert pruning. There is a very specific time and place to prune a hydrangea so that they grow the XXL blooms that we produce. If I told you the secret, I’d have to kill you, sorry nothing personal.


Our hydrangeas are in demand, and luckily we are ready. J Schwanke, The Flower Expert and Host of Fun with Flowers and J on uBloom.com, just checked in to get some of our antiques for an upcoming ABC TV series which he will be doing based on the theme of “Color”. I asked J, “Why Sun Valley?”

He replied in with his usual contagious enthusiasm, "Sun Valley is 'KNOCKING it out of the Park' with those CA Grown Hydrangeas... they look Wonderful... and the Colors are Out of this World!!! I can't wait to get my hands on them..."

Look for J to be featuring our antiques, and don’t be shy, get some for yourself. Once these antiques have reached this stage, they will dry and be beautiful for months to come. Often people pick hydrangea at their peak of color and try to use these for dry arrangements, without success. However, once the flower head has gotten well into antiquing, it should dry easily, and last a long time.

Another interesting fact about hydrangeas is that the colorful petals really aren't the fertile flowers of the plant.  In the center of the petals you will see a small ball, this is actually the fertile flower.


Hydrangeas are a pretty amazing plant, their blooms are loved by designers, gardeners and flower experts.  However, the hydrangea is really a plant for everybody, not just florist and flower professionals.  Anyone who has ever walked by a tall flower laden bush on a warm summer evening, with the rich scent of the blooms drifting on the breeze, knows this perennial favorite.  In many parts of the country, the hydrangea blooming signals that summer is in full swing.  As the blooms antique, it signals that Labor Day nears, days will be getting shorter and we all better take advantage of those last few weeks of summer.

Get out there!

-Lily
www.tsvg.com