Showing posts with label Sun Valley Floral Farm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sun Valley Floral Farm. Show all posts

Jan 8, 2013

Hyacinth Heaven

Here hyacinths of heavenly blue, shook their rich tresses to the morn.

                                                      - James Montgomery, British poet born in 1771

January brings one of our favorite flowers to market. On our Arcata, CA. farm we have started harvesting big numbers of Hyacinth. Folks all around the farm seem pretty jazzed that it is Hyacinth season, so I headed out to the hoop houses to see what all the hub-bub is about.

As I poked my head into each house, trying to find the hyacinth, I saw big green tarps stretched out over black crates. My curiosity led me to enter the hoop house and pull up a corner of the green tarp. There I saw dozens of tiny green sprouts poking up from the soil, it was warm in the hoop house, but it didn’t have much of a flower smell.  The tarps are one of our secrets, we use these so that the hyacinth will grow taller.
Hyacinth Flowers
Keeping the Hyacinth warm and toasty.

Talking with hyacinth fans, the first thing they mention is the fragrance. This surprised me, since it seems all through the floral industry people really connect visually to flowers first. Not that the scent isn’t a big factor, but you always see the flower before you smell it, unless you are in a dark room, or have your eyes closed (try this at home!).

Baby Hyacinths from the Sun Valley group
Baby Hyacinths
Leaving the hoop house with the tiny sprouts, I entered the next one, where the green cloth had been removed, and the hyacinths were big, stout and mature. I slid the door closed behind me, and stepped into a warm fragrant paradise. WOW, what an amazing olfactory experience! So rich, yet not over powering, I started taking deep breathes to saturate my senses. The other part of the experience was the warmth, it being January in Humboldt County the temperature outside was about 45 degrees, windy and the air held a very sharp chill. This hoop house was a moist 80 degrees, with the heavy floral scent, I felt like I was in a tropical rainforest… maybe in Fiji. Was that a monkey bat I just heard? This was a sensory 180 and it was completely intoxicating. 

Hyacinth Field
Fields of Green
The rows of green stems vary in shades, from dark green to near yellow. This is because the bulbs have been planted then rooted for 16 weeks in a dark cooler, within three days of being moved into the hoop house these sprouts will be dark green, as photosynthesis increases.  Some stems were just starting to show the clusters of bell shaped flowers which will soon develop stunning color and pungent scent. Others were just ready to be pulled. As they mature, the hyacinths don’t get “picked”, they get “pulled.” Our team gently pulls out the entire plant, making sure to leave the bulb attached. This will keep the nutrients flowing to the flowers, even after it has left the ground. We also do this with our soil grown tulips, however, with the hyacinth, we core the outside of the bulb off, and keep the center.  When your box of Hyacinths arrive they still have whitish stems, these are really not stems they are the bulb, so don't cut this off.   The bottom of this white bulb is called the “basal plate” and left on will double the vase life of the flower.
Here is the process of getting the hyacinth from the ground to the cooler:

Purple Hyacinth
Just Picked Hyacinth
Purple Hyacinth in crates
Crates get stacked into the Bunching Warehouse

Hyacinth processing at The Sun Valley Group
Team member Keith "coring" the Hyacinth

Hyacinth production
Team member Efyenia grading Hyacinth, by color and size.

5 stem bunched of Hyacinth
Sun Valley Hyacinth, buddled and sleeved. 

Sun Valley Flowers grown in Humboldt County, CA
A beautiful CA Grown Bouquet of fresh Hyacinth, ready for market.
 The back story of the hyacinth, like most myths, has a few different variations and is always a bit sad. According to Teleflora.com:

Legend has it the origin of hyacinth, the highly fragrant, bell-shaped flower, can be traced back to a young Greek boy named Hyakinthos. As the story goes, two gods – Apollo the sun god, and Zephyr the god of the west wind – adored Hyakinthos and competed for his attention. One day, while Apollo was teaching Hyakinthos the art of throwing a discus, Zephyr, in a jealous rage, blew the discus back, killing Hyakinthos with a strike to the head. Apollo named the flower that grew from Hyakinthos’s blood hyacinth.

In modern culture, the legendary rock band the Doors featured a pretty gloomy song titled “Hyacinth House” on their last studio album “LA Woman”. This song is not for the faint of heart, and is a very dark inward look into Jim Morrison’s mind, as he dealt (unsuccessfully) with the stress of his rock star lifestyle and the demands put upon him. Rock and Roll historians speculate that Morrison used the myth of Hyakinthos as an allegory for his inner sadness...I like to think Jim just liked the flowers.

"Hyacinth House" by the Doors

From the “Language of Flowers” these colors can tell very different stories.

•HYACINTH General - Games and Sports; Rashness: Flower Dedicated to Apollo

•HYACINTH Blue - Constancy

•HYACINTH Purple - I Am Sorry; Please Forgive Me: Sorrow

•HYACINTH Pink - Play

•HYACINTH White- Loveliness; I'll Pray for You


Sun Valley Floral Farm Hyacinth Varieties

Call your Sales Rep or talk to your wholesaler about getting some of fragrant colorful Hyacinths and check out our great Hyacinth Resource Page for more information and care and handling instructions.

Ahhhh, Hyacinth heaven,

Sun Valley's Flower Talk Blog








Sep 18, 2012

Decadence on a Stem




Sun Valley Doubel Lilies, 2013
The Rose Lily - Decadence on a Stem
In an industry as vast as floriculture, it is rare when a certain flower really shakes things up. It started about three years ago; the Rose Lily sprang onto the flower scene as the new upstart in autumn bouquets. The premise is simple; a lily with two or three times as many petals as a traditional lily, a low fragrance level and it is pollen free. The complex blooms are very impressive, pure decadence on a stem. These beauties are the eye candy of the floral industry, and we just happen to have a green house full of them!  
Double Lilies
Eye Candy
Two springs ago, even the LA Times took note that this new hybrid is a game changer in the cut flower industry.

As beautiful as these lilies are, an issue we kept running up against was certain petals opening up before all the petals opened. This led to the bloom being uneven. 
Hybrid Rose Lilies
Juan, our resident Rose Lily expert, shows a blossom where a couple petals opened up too early.
So to remedy this problem we had to get very creative, after a lot of testing, we settled on using gerbera nets on each blossom. We traditionally use these nets on our gerbera daisies, however, we found that they work perfectly for protecting the Rose Lilies. Now they burst open in a perfectly symmetrical feast for the eyes.  It definitely takes some serious effort to place a net on each bud, but at Sun Valley we are committed to delivering our customers outstanding quality, and this is a small price to pay. On the day I was out chatting with Juan, he showed me that they wait until just the right time in the buds development to slip the net on.
Lilies growing in Humboldt County
Juan and his crew were about to tackle netting these rows of Rose Lilies.
This autumn marks the true second generation of the Rose Lily.  According to Sun Valley Sales Manager, Doug Dobecki , "This new generation of Rose Lily has bigger and better blossoms, and there are some new colors out in the greenhouse that are gorgeous."
Last weekend, I took a bunch of Rose Lilies and a bunch of our gigantic Sumatra Lilies home.  What a wild contrast, the deep warm magenta of the Sumatra and the elaborate flourish of the Belonica Rose Lily.  This combo just jumps out of the vase at you, it demands your attention.

While cooking breakfast, I found myself just staring at the blooms, inspecting each detail.  Suddenly, the smoke detector went off.   I snapped out of my trance to find a set of pancakes smoldering on the griddle, my young son startled and about to cry and my wife jumping heroically to turn the alarm off.  ...Now isn't that the effect a flower should have on you?

Sun Valley's Blog





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.