Local, Organic, Sustainable Flowers: Join the ‘Slow Flower’ Movement

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“The 50 Mile Bouquet” gives you an inside look at an exciting transformation that is taking place within the cut flower industry. As with food, more people are beginning to ask where their products come from. Meet farmers and florists who are embracing a “slow flower” ethic and working to bring local, seasonal, sustainable flowers to markets and consumers within 50 miles of where the flowers were grown.
“The 50 Mile Bouquet” gives you an inside look at an exciting transformation that is taking place within the cut flower industry. As with food, more people are beginning to ask where their products come from. Meet farmers and florists who are embracing a “slow flower” ethic and working to bring local, seasonal, sustainable flowers to markets and consumers within 50 miles of where the flowers were grown.
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Diane Szukovathy of Jello Mold Farm in Washington’s Skagit Valley is a sustainable flower grower whose practices are safe for the earth, the flowers she plants and the people who ultimately enjoy them. She brings blooms from the field to market within 48 hours of harvest, to the delight of floral designers and flower lovers alike.
Diane Szukovathy of Jello Mold Farm in Washington’s Skagit Valley is a sustainable flower grower whose practices are safe for the earth, the flowers she plants and the people who ultimately enjoy them. She brings blooms from the field to market within 48 hours of harvest, to the delight of floral designers and flower lovers alike.
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The heady scents, evocative color and romantic appearance of old-fashioned lilacs are perhaps the quintessential symbol of springtime.
The heady scents, evocative color and romantic appearance of old-fashioned lilacs are perhaps the quintessential symbol of springtime.
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In the back of a flower farmer’s van, buckets of blooms resemble a vibrant tapestry. From grasses and gourds to sunflowers and dahlias, the diversity of field-grown ingredients is sure to delight and inspire the floral designer who receives this delivery.
In the back of a flower farmer’s van, buckets of blooms resemble a vibrant tapestry. From grasses and gourds to sunflowers and dahlias, the diversity of field-grown ingredients is sure to delight and inspire the floral designer who receives this delivery.
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Berkeley-based designer Max Gill creates soulful arrangements for Alice Waters’ renowned Chez Panisse Restaurant & Café. He uses wild-foraged ingredients, vines and branches from his city-sized garden and blooms grown by Bay Area flower farms.
Berkeley-based designer Max Gill creates soulful arrangements for Alice Waters’ renowned Chez Panisse Restaurant & Café. He uses wild-foraged ingredients, vines and branches from his city-sized garden and blooms grown by Bay Area flower farms.
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Flowers grown nearby are to be enjoyed and cherished in the moment.
Flowers grown nearby are to be enjoyed and cherished in the moment.

The following is an excerpt from The 50 Mile Bouquet: Seasonal, Local and Sustainable Flowers by Debra Prinzing (St. Lynn’s Press, 2012). This book introduces many innovative voices of the sustainable flower movement: organic flower farmers, green floral designers, and consumers who are increasingly asking, “Where and how were my flowers grown, and who grew them?”  Most flowers on the market today are imported, mass-produced and chemical-laden, and in this book, Prinzing shows us that there are meaningful alternatives. A growing number of farmers and florists provide local, seasonal and sustainable flowers. With detailed reporting and full color photographs, this informative and visually elegant book takes us onto the farms and into design studios to follow the journey of the 50-mile bouquet. This is the first book to spotlight the major transformation underway in how cut flowers are grown, designed and consumed. This excerpt is the complete introduction of the book.

Do you enjoy flowers in your life? Are you drawn to a voluptuous heirloom rose like a bee to honey? Is burying your head in a just-picked garden bouquet and inhaling its perfume a joy-inducing experience? You are not alone. Our love affair with flowers is ancient and visceral.

But lately something has been missing from everyday flowers — you’ve probably noticed. That clutch of gerbera daisies or tulips from the supermarket may appear picture-perfect, yet it feels disconnected from the less-than-perfect (but incredibly romantic) flowers growing in your own backyard. The mixed bouquet delivered in a happy-face vase by a floral service is pretty enough, but somehow looks unnatural, as if it were produced in a laboratory and not in real garden soil, nurtured by sun and rain. These blooms feel far removed from the fields in which they grew. And they are, in more ways than one. To the many of us who seek that visceral joy of just-picked bouquets to bring into our homes or use for special celebrations — or give as gifts to others — the flower has lost its soul. What happened?

These are “factory flowers,” grown by a $40 billion worldwide floriculture industry whose goal is uniformity and durability — so as to withstand long shipping distances. They are altogether different from the carefree zinnias,  romantic peonies and wispy cosmos you clip from the garden for a home-styled arrangement. The $100 box of long-stemmed roses may look close to perfect, but its contents have been off the farm for up to two weeks. Those scentless creations were likely grown a continent or two away and shipped on a dose of preservatives to travel to you — poor substitutes for heady, abundant armloads of blooms gathered from grandmother’s cutting garden. They have lost the fleeting, ephemeral quality of an old-fashioned, just-picked bouquet.

A Greener Way: Sustainable, Local Flowers

  • Published on Mar 30, 2012
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