Showing posts with label CA Grown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CA Grown. Show all posts

Jan 1, 2013

Flower Marketing for 2013

Here we go on another trip around the sun. In the flower industry the sun plays a larger role than in most industries, so we are especially glad to see the New Year arrive and now we can start moving toward Valentine’s Day, Women’s Day, Mother’s Day and longer days in general.


This time of year it is wise to take a few moments to reflect on the last year and chart your course for the coming year. The last year was a good year here at Sun Valley. We had some great crops and some big sales. There was definite room for improvement; some of you might have noticed us run out of red tulips in the last days before Christmas and maybe we should never grow the Doubleen Lily again. That said, our team members achieved some very lofty goals in planting, harvest and packaging a staggering amount of beautiful flowers.

In looking forward to 2013 I always wonder, “How can we encourage more people to bring home flowers.” Not necessarily Sun Valley flowers (although this is strongly encouraged!) but buying flowers to bring to your home, office and give as gifts. One of the highlights of the last year was sitting down for lunch with best-selling author Amy Stewart. Many of you may know her as the author of the seminal book on the flower industry titled, “Flower Confidential” where she traveled the globe finding out the inside scoop on the floral industry. This is a great read for anyone who appreciates flowers, and wonders what really happens behind the scenes.

Amy made a great observation about something the cut flower industry is really missing, this is a cult following. She brought up the popular television show “Sex in the City”, which ran for many years and spawned two movies. In this show the main character Carrie Bradshaw, played by Sarah Jessica Parker, is obsessed with ultra-expensive shoes. Shoes created by fancy Italian designers that few of us could ever afford in real life. Her fixation on shoes through the run of the program turned their entire audience into $500 high heel aficionados. Due to the show’s popularity and longevity, a whole generation of women…and men, now knows what a “Manolo” or a “Louboutin” is.


$770 bucks!
 This interesting phenomenon probably hasn’t done that much to sell more $770 Dior Gladiators, however, the fact that “Manolo” is now a household word shows the potential of having an advocate in Hollywood or New York. Obviously, I don’t think the costume designer or the screen writer for the show was actively marketing for these elite shoe companies, I think this was a natural, organic story line which once it took hold they were able to develop, repeatedly.

What if Carrie Bradshaw had been infatuated with lilies as she was with shoes? Imagine her walking by a florist, pining away at a dramatic Gizmo Lily, from our Lilitopia Collection. Imagine Carrie surrounding her laptop with Sumatras, and imagine how the Rose Lily would have blown her mind. Now imagine the devote fans of her show following her lead…ahhh, it’s a beautiful picture isn’t it?

As an industry we need to promote having CA Grown flowers in the home as a healthy lifestyle choice and an aesthetically pleasing necessity, whether you live in a tiny Manhattan apartment, a rolling estate in the foothills of Colorado, or in a subdivision in San Diego.

Where can we find our flower advocates, our flower fans? The first place we need to look is outside of the flower industry, and hopefully into mass media, television, social media and Hollywood, and we especially need to look to the younger set. Today’s young women have more education and more buying power than any previous generation; we need to demonstrate the joy of flower culture, starting in 2013.

Amy’s next observation was equally as powerful. We need to take several pages from the Wine Industry's play book. Our two industries are so similar, it can be frightening, yet wine continues to grow at a ridiculous rate, while flowers are not. …Sure you can catch a nice buzz from wine, but flowers are also intoxicating, with a much smaller hangover. Our markets are basically the same.

As I consider this point, I see the way the “pairing” craze has combined the food and wine industries, this is sheer unadulterated genius. It is an upsell and a value added scenario, which creates a much better experience for the user. How about in 2013 we start pairing flowers with the meal as well, based on scent, texture, color, geography, aesthetic form and history. We simply need to pull back the lens in that shot in Sunset Magazine to have not only the meal and the glass of pinot, but the flowers which compliment both.

Some folks are already doing this, check out this piece from the Texas Department of Agriculture, very cool, and check out this article from Food and Wine titled "A Lesson in Paring Scents.” What a great way of enlarging the gourmet circle to include epicurean flowers.

Tulips in a stemware

It also strikes me that wine and flowers share another aesthetic. They both come from the earth, and involve a relatively dirty process to bring out the final product; however, they both are enjoyed in pristine glass vessels. The vase and the wine glass each epitomize style and refinement, and we need to see that people are as conscientious of filling up their vase, as they are their glass.

From Sun Valley we wish you a warm, flower filled Happy New Year.  Something about the New Year, resolutions and fresh starts ...it all makes me very hopeful. Cheers!

"Flower Talk" the blog from the Sun Valley Group


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











Apr 23, 2012

Snowballs in Spring - Viburnum Snowballs, that is


Way back in July of last year, I took one of my first trips to the Willow Creek farm with Lane. During that trip, we saw Cotinus, Rosehip and Ilex crops, all in the early stages of their growing cycle. Part of that trip included a tour through Sun Valley's fields of Viburnum opulus, commonly called Snowballs, which we have in abundance right now.

Hoops and Fields

The Viburnum crops I saw on that sunny Sunday in July had been planted periodically over a four year period, some in open fields and some that would soon be covered within hoophouses. The crops in hoophouses "arrive" around three weeks earlier than their open field-grown counterparts, creating a longer season for this fabulous spring flower. Hoops are added to more of the field each year, so our farmers can keep the crops nice and warm, even during winter, when the outside air temperature hovers at a chilly 45 degrees. The warmth from the hoops contributes to a much faster growing rate, thus allowing for an earlier crop. Once Snowballs in hoophouses start to phase out, their neighboring Snowballs in open fields phase in.

In July, Snowballs grow in the open sun. Soon the farmers will stretch plastic
over these metal frames to create hoophouses.

Lane checks the growth progress in July

Lane's dog Mae Mae navigates around the crop

 

Harvest to Home

As I mentioned above, Viburnum harvesting has just begun. Willow Creek farmers cut them when their heads are nice and full. (You can see what I mean in the close-up picture below.) Freshly harvested Viburnum goes straight into buckets and into our Arcata farm coolers. From there, they make their way to our customers in wet hampers, which prevent dehydration.


Viburnum crops in hoophouses are being harvested now

Viburnum in the field will be harvested in a few weeks


Many Shades of Green

One of the most fun things about Viburnum is it's similarity to those hyper color t-shirts from the 80's! Right now, the crop is a charming green color, similar to that of Green Ball - an extra large variety of green dianthus we grow. Once the crop is bathed in a few days of good sunshine, it starts to turn a lovely shade of bridal white. We harvest Viburnum in all of its stages of color. It all makes for a nice floral complement in spring, Mother's Day and wedding arrangements!

Close-up of gorgeous green Viburnum taken a couple weeks ago
 
"In-betweener" Viburnum from a previous year's crop is changing
from green to white


Fully white Viburnum from a previous year's crop

Vibrant Sunrise Bouquet from Sun Pacific Bouquet - featuring Viburnum
  
Vibrant Sunset Bouquet from Sun Pacific Bouquet - also featuring Viburnum

The viburnum season typically lasts April through May, making it the quintessential spring flower. So, don't miss your chance to fill your buckets with the kind of Snowballs you won't want to throw!

As always, you can learn more information like crop standards and care tips for Viburnum by visiting our Flower Resource pages on our website. Here is the direct link: http://www.thesunvalleygroup.com/thesunvalleygroup/pdf/SV_RP_Viburnum.pdf

Feb 7, 2012

Sunshining Valentine's Day


Day 8 of Valentine's Day shipping...

During this two-week-or-so period we at Sun Valley like to call "Valentine's Day," I've been getting my boots dirty while traipsing around the Arcata farm trying to get a bird's eye view of the heightened holiday floral production. Last week, we took a tour of Tulipville in Arcata, so it seemed like a great idea to kick this week off with a tour of the Oxnard farm! So, I asked Melina, one of my Oxnard counterparts, to give us her own personalized tour of the crops at our sunny So Cal farm. Boy, am I glad she did. Her photographs are simply gorgeous... as are her subjects!

See for yourself...
Brassica (Kale)

An open field of Brassica

Brassica has been simply stunning this season! It's been a real crowd pleaser in the shops, and it's breathtaking to see growing in these lush, beautiful rows!

Carmine Lavender brassica
 
Green brassica


Asters - think pink.. and purple!

Pink Sea Star asters growing in a hoophouse

A hoophouse full of purple and pink Sea Star asters

Close-up of Sea Star asters
 
A row of hot pink Serenade asters, nearly ready for harvest

Pink and hot pink Matsumotos, getting ready for Valentine's Day!

Freshly harvested hot pink Matsumoto asters in buckets of water, bound for the coolers

Freshly harvested pink Matsumoto asters


Dianthus (Green Trick and Green Ball)

Green dianthus is one crop that is harvested green... and stays green!

I don't know about you, but these photos helped bring the sunshine in despite the rain and snow we've been having throughout the country. Imagine what the flowers will do in person!

A special thanks to Melina for giving us this visual delight of a tour!

If you want more information about any of the flowers you see here, check out our Flower Resource Pages on the TSVG website by clicking HERE.


Jan 30, 2012

The Return of the Iris

There comes a time - well, a few times - in every flower farmer's career when he finds one of his crops doesn't perform according to plan. Infinite factors, including a drought or a flood, weather that's too hot or too cold, or fluke problems with the crop itself, can have adverse effects on the flowers' well-being.

As many of you already know, this was recently the case with our iris production. A number or things didn't go quite right at exactly the same time, and we were left with little iris to show for it.

Well, my friends, spring is here in California and Iris is making a comeback! Here's a quick photo tour of the iris crops in Oxnard (taken last Thursday):







If you're ready for Iris, it's ready for you! Thanks for waiting!

Jan 27, 2012

Chinese New Year: A Floral New Year


Dragons on parade for the Chinese New Year (Photo courtesy of chinatownconnection.com)
We're smack dab in the middle of the Chinese New Year, the most important of traditional Chinese holidays, during which time Chinese populations (and anyone who follows the Chinese Zodiac) all over the world celebrate a new beginning. There are several traditions linked to this holiday, also known as the Spring Festival, and as you might have already guessed, flowers are a big part of the tradition.

According to sources like Chinatown San Francisco and The New York Times, flowers symbolize wealth, high career status and good fortune in Chinese culture. They believe that fresh blooms in the home during the New Year will bring success in the coming year. Therefore, elaborate flower markets in China and Chinatowns everywhere are a common sight to see this time of year. 

Hong Kong flower market (Photo courtesy of nytimes.com)
This is, as anyone near a Chinatown will tell you, simply wonderful. What a great time of year for floral folks in these areas!
Starfighters symbolize wealth
and prosperity

My question is: with the tremendous range of flowers available year-round nowadays, why aren't those of us who celebrate the Gregorian New Year (January 1st) celebrating with flowers as well? The prevalent use of flowers during the Chinese New Year is certainly rooted in tradition and symbolism, but hey, we've got tradition, too! And flowers are full of symbolism!

Just take the Stargazer Lily (which was hybridized right here at Sun Valley, by the way) and its cousin the Starfighter: They symbolize wealth and prosperity. Put a bunch of Stargazers/fighters in your home and open yourself up for good fortune in the New Year! Tulips signify perfect love. Put a couple bunches of French tulips in your home... and who knows what will happen?!

The point is (you probably know where this is going already): Flowers enhance every occasion. It's a fact. It seems as though every other culture on this planet really grasps this concept, while many Americans only seem to remember flowers for Valentine's Day, Mother's Day and weddings.

Let's get on board, people. In 2013 and years to come, let's celebrate like it's the Chinese New Year. Let's celebrate with flowers!


Not sure what flowers are available during the New Year? Take a look at our crop calendar by clicking HERE

Jan 16, 2012

Life's most important question

You and I, your company and Sun Valley - we're in the flower business, or the business of spreading cheer. We've all read the reports about how flowers make people happier, calmer, more energetic, less stressed, etc. Facilitating these emotions is what we do every day, and it's something to feel good about. Perhaps equally important as the inherent benefits of the flowers we grow and sell is how the work we do to produce flowers benefits others.
photo from nobelprize.org
Martin Luther King, Jr. said, "Life's most persistent and urgent question is, 'What are you doing for others?'" Dr. King, a martyr for social change and equality, did quite a lot for others during his short stay on Earth, more than most. But you don't have to be the leader of a civil rights movement to help out your fellow man or woman.

Like I mentioned above, we essentially make people happy for a living, but there's a whole lot that goes on before we put flowers into our customers' hands as well. This is where Veriflora comes in. The Veriflora certification ensures those buying our flowers that we are committed to delivering the highest quality products possible and producing them in an environmentally, socially and economically sustainable manner. To me, this means that we continuously strive to improve the lives of our team members, our community and our customers by working conscientiously. It means helping others out each step of the way.

Today, while we commemorate the great Martin Luther King, Jr., let's ask ourselves just what we can do for others every day in everything we do.
 
Read more about Sun Valley and Veriflora by visiting our resource page: http://www.thesunvalleygroup.com/thesunvalleygroup/pdf/SV_RP_VerifloraCertified.pdf

Learn more about Veriflora by visiting their website: http://www.veriflora.com/index.php