Showing posts with label Growing Hydrangea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Growing Hydrangea. Show all posts

Jul 28, 2015

The New Everlasting Colors of Hydrangea

A few weeks ago, we talked about what it takes to grow hydrangea.  Now it's time to let you in on Sun Valley's not-so-secret NEW varieties, how they're different from the old, and what it means for you.

growing purple hydrangea
Seeing purple.
Tim, our head agronomist and resident hydrangea expert, gave the Sun Valley Sales Team an in-depth tour last week; I tagged along, excited to take photos of our colorful crops and learn a little bit more about the new varieties.


picking hydrangea pink purple sun valley
Tim and the team examine a hoop of pink and purple hued hydrangea

 What did we learn? A lot.

The new varieties with which we are moving forward are hybridized for better performance.  The older varieties bloom every two years, but these new hybrid breeds give us high-quality flowers every year.  This consistency is a farmer's dream and allows us to improve growing practices and quality year after year.

One question the sales team kept asking was about size--"How big are the blooms?"

hydrangea colors
Sales Reps Doug and Debbie discuss bloom size.

Tim's answer? They're big (just take a look at the photos), though they're not as colossal as the older varieties.  So, instead of massive blooms the size of a baby, we now have a range of sizes, which gives buyers and designers plenty of options.  Not only that, we've found that the most in-demand attributes (as far as hydrangeas are concerned) are vase life and color. And since these varieties are bred specifically for the cut flower industry, their vase life is incredible.

"Just take a look at their names," says Tim, "Everlasting Amethyst, Everlasting Coral, Everlasting Diamond...these flowers are bred to last weeks and weeks after they have been cut. They're bulletproof."

hydrangea blooms farming sun valley


What about color? How are we getting the beautiful mixed hues of blue, pink, purple, and green?

As we've covered in our previous hydrangea post, coloration of these plants is dependent upon their specific variety as well as soil pH. A pH of 5 or below produces shades of blue and lavender, while a pH of 7 or higher will give us hues of pink.  Depending on what we want, we feed the plants with water adjusted to a particular pH, which in turn, changes the soil pH and the blooms' color.



Everlasting opal hydrangea purple
Everlasting Opal, slowly changing to dark purple (pH 7+)

everlasting opal blue hydrangea
 Blue Diamond (low pH 5-)


pearl hydrangea
Emerald: This will change to a beautiful, pale green color in the fall.


everlasting coral hydrangea pink and green
Everlasting Coral (a beautiful pink/green combination)

everylasting amethyst hydrangea green
Another new bi-color variety, Everlasting Amethyst
 
What about growing conditions?

Regardless whether our hydrangea is a new variety or old, temperature and light are still of utmost importance!  Hydrangeas like to keep cool, and they also need a little bit of shade.  We cover our open hoop houses with shade cloth, which gives the plants just enough sunlight to grow and develop, while also allowing the cool, coastal air to circulate freely.  This open and shaded environment encourages long stem length and vibrant coloring of the florets.

One crop tending practice we're doing differently is how we are feeding and watering the plants.  Before, we used well pumps to pump water into large barrels where we mixed in fertilizers and acids.  But now, we've brought our greenhouse irrigation practice out to the field, which uses computer-controlled, combined irrigation and fertilization--a process known as (and I didn't make this up) FertigationFertigation allows us to control the exact amount of nutrients each crop receives, helping us not only be more efficient with our natural resources, but also helping us control our resulting end product. 


baby hydrangea plants
New hydrangea rows under shade cloth

Purple hydrangea


So what do you like? Large, medium, or small? Purple, pink, blue, white, or bi-color? (Let's not forget the future fall colors of Antiqued Hydrangea).  Here at Sun Valley, we have it all and will be in production through the fall--plenty of time to have fun with different color combinations, various sizes, and new floral designs.  We tried something new, why don't you?

farming hydrangea hoop houses
Mature hydrangea in hoops

Aug 6, 2013

What Color is that Hydrangea?



He called hydrangeas purple. And they were. 
Not fixed and deadly, (like a curving line
That merely makes a ring).
It was a purple changeable to see. 
And so hydrangeas came to be.

       Wallace Stevens – first stanza of Anecdote of the Abnormal

Hydrangeas Growing at Sun Valley Floral Farm
Sun Valley Hydrangeas

Is that hydrangea purple, or dark pink?  Is that a dark blue or purple?  Dark blue or blue blue?  Walk into the Sun Valley warehouse this time of year and be prepared to join the grand hydrangea color debate.  This might sound silly but it really is a challenge, since our customers need words to describe what often times is really hard to describe. Here is a recent quote from Sales Rep. Barbara Haskins,

"The head of the hydrangea is baby blue, with hints of sky blue, over on the left side it gets towards Navy blue, and the other side goes towards lavender."

Sun Valley Hydrangea
What color is this hydrangea?
Words may not be able to do justice to the eclectic color pallet of a hydrangea, so then we start taking photographs.  This opens up another conversation, since every computer monitor, printer and camera is going to see the various shades of color in any given hydrangea differently.  

Hydrangeas from Sun Valley
Feel the Pink!
So what to do?  First of all, know that we are getting as close as we can to your color requests. The crews are separating by color out in the fields, under natural light.  They place different shades of a certain color and variety in different buckets, so you will get consistency in your order.

growing and picking hydrangeas
Team member Ray Lugo is in charge of our hydrangea crop.
Then, let your customers know that hydrangea are a a multifaceted flower and to expect some variation...and celebrate it.  We pride ourselves on big bold heads, so these will naturally represent more colors.

The worst thing you can do is stray away from these gorgeous blooms. Don't fear the wild colors, embrace them!  Flowers are meant to be colorful, not shades of gray, let the color flow and roll with it.  

hydrangea fields
Hydrangea Rainbow!
Don't fall down the path of pop diva Madonna who was quoted saying, "I absolutely loathe hydrangeas." after a fan gave her a hydrangea bouquet in 2011.  Jeez!

Madonna might have been wise to embrace the hydrangea like we do at Sun Valley, since in folklore there are references to the mighty hydrangea being able to break the curse of a witch.  Perhaps this why we haven't hear much from the material girl lately?

"The Blue Island" in the Azores.
Sun Vally has a great selection of inventory, and our Sales Reps will do their best to give you a good idea of the colors, just dive in!  The only other place on earth that may compete with us in the hydrangea department is an island in the Azores named Faial. This island is  known as "The Blue Island" because of the huge amount of hydrangeas growing there. If there were any florists on the island, it would probably be named "The Bluish Lavender, with a hint of Pink Island."

Sun Valley Floral Farm's Blog, Flower Talk.