Amy Stewart Valentine’s Day article in the S.F. Chronicle
In flowers, too, green is the new red
For Valentine’s Day, choose flowers raised organically and sustainably — or nearly so
Amy Stewart, Special to The Chronicle
Wednesday, February 7, 2007
In flowers, too, green is the new red
For Valentine’s Day, choose flowers raised organically and sustainably — or nearly so
Amy Stewart, Special to The Chronicle
Wednesday, February 7, 2007
You’ve heard, “Say it with Flowers.” Amy’s book tells you how to “Say it right with the freshest, hippest, most beautiful and lasting cut flowers that also may happen to have been ecologically raised.”
What I also learned is that cut flowers are incorporated into daily life in some countries. Ahem, Americans, you holiday-focused flower buyers. Live a little dangerously every now and then and buy flowers for your soul, not just the souls you’re obliged to buy for.
After following Amy on this information-packed journey in which she takes a flower’s path from conception (in the hybridizer’s mind) to growth to processing to shipping to marketing and finally to its final destination, you will not only be exhausted for Amy, you will be much more savvy about the freshest, hippest, most meaningful and most extravagent floral offerings in the U.S.; and you’ll know where to get the cheap stuff. Hey, nothing wrong with a budget bouquet… except that it might not last very long and it might have been treated to a pesticide drench. Don’t eat the daisies. Really.
You will also become acquainted with a new form of labeling signifying higher ecological standards. Dare I say “guilt-free” flowers? Amy even touches on a store near you carrying high quality flowers at bargain prices. Any guesses?
Delving into post-harvest flower conditions, Amy tells you how to spot the freshest displays and how to maximize vase life once you get those babies home. You’ll also come to understand why cut flowers can be so danged expensive at times, and you’ll learn about the hidden and not-so-beautiful environmental costs and considerations.
I came away from Flower Confidential with a much keener sense of the business of flowers and a desire to buy organically grown and ecologically managed flowers when given the opportunity. Organic food is becoming mainstream because more people buying it… and more grocers are selling it… because more people are buying it. Now is the time to push the cut flower industry toward organic and Integrated Pest Management (IPM) practices, and toward providing better working conditions and benefits for flower factory workers.
Still, knowing “…the Good, the Bad, and the Beautiful…” about the flower business does nothing to dim the feeling I get when I walk into a florist shop or the floral kiosk at my local grocery store. Pure romance. Pure swoon. And to the flowers? You’ve come a long way, baby. No really. Holland? Ecuador? You look like you could use a drink.
Check out this video snippet of Amy talking about Flower Confidential:
Be sure to catch Amy on her book tour. She may be coming to a bookstore or garden show near you! Read all about it on her blog.
Successive frosts and freezes and a rainfall deficit means the garden is looking pretty ragged right now. I’m not cutting anything back till frost danger has passed… except my roses, which I should have already pruned but… haven’t. If I do it in the next couple days, the rose police won’t have anything on me.

These pansies and tulips are loving being tucked up against a stucco wall on the southwest corner of the property.
Wine industry lifts glasses to vanishing glut
Published 12:00 am PST Thursday, January 25, 2007
Story appeared in MAIN NEWS section, Page A1
Happy to have done my part as an Amercan cizen… hiccup… an Amer-i-can Ciz-it-en… hiccup!
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Under normal conditions, an EcoForms™ pot will last five years.
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