Showing posts with label Orange ilex. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Orange ilex. Show all posts

Nov 1, 2016

Ilex in Autumn

Can you feel it? Halloween has passed, election season is reaching its apex, and pumpkin spice is everywhereFall is here in all its glory and you don't even need a calendar to know.  The same goes if you're a flower farmer...the flowers tell you.


Orange Ilex Berries
Orange Ilex
Take ilex verticillata for example... our ilex season kicks off in early October with gold and orange berries which echo the changing seasons perfectly.  November brings an overlap of all the colors—gold, orange, and the brilliant red-orange variety, flame. November is also when we start offering our famous, cherry-red ilex, which we continue harvesting through December.

Ilex berry colors
From left to right: Flame, Red, Gold, and Orange Ilex

 Ilex Farming

We grow ilex at our  Willow Creek Farm, located 40 miles inland from coastal Arcata in Northern California.  This canyon in the hills provides the perfect micro-climate for ilex—a long, extended autumn, mild weather, and rich soil.  These elements come together to help us produce our high-quality ilex, renowned for its long stems and large berries.


ilex farm growing
Our Willow Creek Team Lead showing off some ilex
Mature ilex plants produce berried stems every other year, which means they are a long-game crop that requires devotion.  And for the last three decades, devotion is exactly what they have been receiving from Lane.   Soil-grown tulips aside, ilex is one of Lane's favorite crops and growing and breeding them has become quite the labor of love.
orange ilex berries

As mentioned above, ilex is not a short-term projectover the last 30 years, as Lane found desirable characteristics in individual plants (such as strong stems, great laterals, and good berry density), he marks that particular plant, and later, cross-breeds them with others in order to produce the best of the best.  Lane has created some of the finest ilex in the industry this wayilex that you cannot find anywhere else.


The leaves on ilex will naturally drop off as the season progresses; however, when demand is up, we employ a few natural tricks to get ilex to drop their leaves.  Ilex berries are a fruit, and like most fruits, they emit ethylene gas.  By covering up a cart of freshly picked branches with plastic and leaving it overnight, ethylene gas becomes trapped and causes the leaves to drop off, leaving us with clean, berried stems.  Once ilex has shed its leaves, it remains a sturdy, dependable product that can last the entire season.

stems of ilex

  Ilex Design

Ilex branches add incredible lines, depth, and height, and their berries provide a powerful focal punch. The sky is the limit when designing with ilex.  Gold, orange, and flame-hued ilex make great additions to autumn arrangements, wreaths, and bouquets...and of course, there's nothing prettier than a vase full of ilex berries by themselves. Just check out the versatile and gorgeous combinations below: 
 
ilex arrangement ideas
Orange and Gold Ilex Arrangements

fall ilex arrangement ideas

 We sell cut ilex with stem lengths ranging from 16-32 inches, and also offer mixed color boxes, allowing our customers to choose what best fits their purposes.  Order now to get our range of autumn ilex, grown with love, and exclusively bred to be the best of the best.

Lady Aster Sun Valley Ilex

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Oct 1, 2013

Do You Know How To Tango? ...Tango Lily that is!



“All the freaky people make the beauty of the world.”

                                                                                                                -Michael Franti


Lane DeVries loves to grow flowers. As I mentioned a few weeks ago, Lane DeVries’ favorite flower is a soil grown tulip, I swam against the tide to admit that my favorite flower is a lily. What may have gotten lost in translation is how much Lane loves to grow all sorts of other flowers.  Lane is constantly searching out new and different varieties of flowers. There are always several test varieties in the ground, and the growers are always whispering about a new flower they have growing out in the back greenhouse.

we grow Asiatic lilies
Do you know how to Tango?
Flowers not only take time to grow, but they take much more time to understand.  For about the last five years we have been growing larger and larger crops of a really wild Asiatic hybrid lily. Have you heard of the “Tango Series”? These lilies are the new comers to the Asiatic scene, and we are still getting our customers saying, “Whoa, what’s that lily?”


Tango Lilies
Autumn is in the air... and in a vase!

Today I would like to introduce you to a Tango variety called “Orange Art”.
 
Tango’s are bred in Holland using “Latvia Promise” as a base. Latvia Promise is an Asiatic originating in Latvia with slightly up facing blooms and most notably a multitude of dark speckles and heavy brush strokes.  The substantial amount of dark speckles and thick brush marks, against very vibrant colors is what makes the Tango Series really stand out.

Orange Art is a wonderful fall lily featuring stunning orange with dark burgundy, brownish tones in the throat. The dramatic color scheme can work in all sorts of autumn themed bouquets.  The gorgeous colors match pumpkins, scarecrows and all the fun of the Halloween season.
   
This lily however isn’t for the faint of heart; it could be paired with a witch and a haunted house to look very frightening.  Such a deep contrast all in one flower can be pretty scary.

Flowers at a haunted house
Spooky!
Orange Art is painted with all the feeling of September, October and November; however, it is more than just a nice fall lily.  This lily has depth and personality that show off its sophistication. This is very modern flower, not just because it is a relatively new hybrid, but its whole feel.  This lily would stick out like a sore thumb at your grandmother’s house, unless your grandmother is Carrie Donovan


Orange Art Tango Lilies and Sun Valley Ilex berries
Orange Ilex and an Orange Art Tango lily.
The flower world gets so caught up in “tradition” and I am guilty myself.  The Ile de France tulip, the Stargazer lily and the American Beauty rose, these flowers represent a great tradition in the world wide cut flower industry. 

Orange Art Asiatic Lilies
Tango Lilies, framed by a 125 year old Black Walnut Tree.
Make a new tradition today.  Break the mold and experience the entire Tango Series.  These lilies are making waves and their wild brush strokes are shaking up the floral establishment. Check out this short film from our new "Field in Focus" Series about Orange Art.


Sun Valley's Flower Talk Blog