Showing posts with label cabbage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cabbage. Show all posts

Jul 29, 2014

Ornamental Kale Is Coloring Up

"The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco"
           Often attributed to Mark Twain, but debunked by the good folks at Anchor Brewing.

The Sun Valley sales team travels a fair amount. Trade shows, customer visits and public outreach are part of the job and we love to get out and share our passion for flowers. These events are great because we are able to get direct feedback on our flowers and receive guidance in what we should be planting. The huge lilies we grow and beautiful bouquets we make often get the most comments, but a trend I've been seeing in the last year is people really taking notice of "ornamental kale," or what we like to call by the scientific name, brassica.

Ornamental Kale arrangement
Brassica in a Bucket
This isn't a new crop to the flower industry, and in the horticulture world it is very established. What is new about this crop; is that now flower designers and consumers can get this traditional cool weather crop year round. The colors that are most in demand are the white, lavender and purple. This is where Sun Valley excels, since our farm located in Humboldt County stays pretty brisk all summer.

Grwoing Ornamental kale
Purple Kale, about 6 weeks before harvest.

varigated white brassica
Welcome to the Jungle!
 In order for the kale to "color up" you need cool temperatures at night. While most of the United States is sizzling in the 90's and 100's this time of year, July in coastal Humboldt is a very different story. Foggy mornings lead to clear afternoons, and with the sunset the clouds and moisture move back in from the sea. Our average July high is 63 degrees Fahrenheit, our average low is 52 degrees, and a peak in the record book reveals that our record low is 43 degrees and our record high is a hot and sweaty 76 degrees.

Lavendar Ornamental Kale
Arcata Cabbage!

Ornamental kale for flower and floral arranging
Lavender Ornamental Kale
While this sort of summer weather is frowned upon by many people, brassica absolutely loves it. This unique growing condition is the only way to get the ornamental kale to "color up."  During the winter months we grow this crop at our farm in Oxnard, since it would be too cold and cloudy in Arcata.

Our kale is prized for the big heads. You can keep all the leaves on and use as a focal or pull off a few layers and use as a wonderful texture element.

Our "flower friend" J Schwanke did a great video with some design ideas last fall, check it out...he makes it look easy.




Keep an eye out for our brassica, it's not just for fancy designers and esoteric arrangements. Our customers are selling it as 3 stem consumer bunches and using it for great structure in bouquets. The purple will be especially hot going into autumn, since the trend for purple as a "fall color" keeps growing.


Need Amercian Grown flowers? Look for this logo


Lastly, this botanical shines as an American Grown and California Grown crop, I love that many old school flower folks just call brassica "cabbage." It really fits the whole farmer's market look and feel that is the predominant style we are seeing this season.

Blog about flowers



 




May 21, 2013

Don’t eat the KALE!



Sun Valley is offering a year round ornamental kale crop.  Although, we kind of like to be fancy and call it by its genus “brassica,” and many folks also call it “cabbage.”  Ornamental kale’s popularity has been steadily growing in the floral industry for several years now, and at Sun Valley we have been planting larger and larger crops to supply demand.  We are currently offering brassica as a year round item, with perhaps a week gap as the farm production moves from our Oxnard farm, north to Arcata in June. 

Ornimental Kale Photo
Brassica growing at our Oxnard Farm
As you would expect, our kale is in the same scientific class as many edible crops.  It is in the mustard family, and is a very close relative to cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli and Brussels sprouts(yuck!).  Just to get this information up front, no matter how tasty our Brassica looks, it is not for human or animal consumption…much the way I see Brussels sprouts.

Growing Ornamental Kale
Brassica growing at our Arcata Farm
Being at events where we have arrangements and bouquets featuring kale, it almost always manages to steal the show from the lilies, tulips and iris Sun Valley is so well known for.  Last month we had a beautiful new lily at a trade show, we had arranged the lilies with some brassica stems to add girth. We ended up spending the day looking on, as interested people literally pushed the lily petals aside to get a closer look at the brassica.

Sun Pacific Brassica Bouquets
Two bouquets from the "Cabbage Patch" collection, by Sun Pacific Bouquet.
Brassica’s current widespread popularity can be attributed to its natural, “Farmer’s Market” type feel. People are enjoying the warm earthy feel of brassica. Simple arrangements that look like the elements were gathered from a back yard garden or a roadside stand are really hot right now.  Also, it being summer, the opportunity to think “Outside the Flower Shop” is really great.  Finding non-traditional botanicals in the woods, on the side of the highway or on the edge of a pasture frees the floral design palette.

We recently had world class floral designer Pieter Landmanon the farm for a film project we are producing.  Even with all the resources, flowers and greens of Sun Valley at his disposal, he walked into the studio with a handful of interesting grasses he has spotted in a neighbor’s unkempt yard.

Integrating a bit of the truly natural world in arrangements is a European touch; however, it seems very American, very “Do It Yourself” and very homestead.  Any of our California Grown Ornamental Kale varieties can also fit this bill, and the size and color make it the best of both worlds.  A “back to the land” element, yet with bulk, lovely color, and intense texture of a more upscale botanical.

Ornamental Kale, Cabbage or Brassica
Some Brassica options
Traditional brassica is thought of as a winter crop, since the beautiful coloration in the heads comes with cold temperatures.  This leaves brassica off most people’s radar for the hot months of summer. However, we move the crop to our Arcata farm for summer, where our average high temp for summer is 61 degrees Fahrenheit.  No, that is not a typo. This is a chilly place to live, which is perfect for brassica to color up…and for year-round soil grown tulips!  It is also great for not sweating in summer. 

 Here is one of our beautiful "Resource Pages" for inspiration and education, we have created these for many of our crops, see the full collection.

Brassica education
For some nice design ideas, check out this blog post from DesignSponge.

This summer have some fun with brassica, straight out of our garden.
Flower Talk with Lily, Sun Valley's Blog