November 16, 2020
Rain in the Forecast
October 4, 2020
A Bit of Last-Minute Canning
September 20, 2020
Utah Home, Then and Now
As we're getting ready to move to Oregon (by the way, we're moving to Oregon!), I thought it would be fun to do the same Before and After series that I did for our Pullman home.
When we moved in, everything was brown, dead, and dry. There were very few flowers, and a lot more fruit trees. Our outbuildings have changed quite a bit. Are you ready? Here we go!
Front of House
THEN
I do enjoy this front corner bed. It's got all kinds of things in it these days: sedum, daylilies, asters, roses, peonies, irises, scabiosa. It makes me happy all summer long.
Front Shade Beds
THEN
NOW
Back Yard
THEN
Garden spot, orchard, and the woodshed there on the right.
Far back corner
NOW
Looking back at the house. New deck.
Back Flowerbeds
THEN
NOW
Oval Flowerbed
THEN
NOW
September 10, 2020
Saying Goodbye is Hard to Do
This has been a big summer. Along with the rest of the world, COVID has
changed my business and my personal life in big and small ways, across the
board. However, before coronavirus ever reared its ugly head, my husband and I
had been discussing the possibility of a move. He has been looking for a new
job for some time now, and none of the options here in Utah were quite right.
So we decided to look further afield. We have always
loved the Oregon Coast, so that’s where we began applying for jobs. After an
interview trip in June, we decided to accept an offer in Astoria, Oregon. We
are excited to move there! I think this will be a great move for our family.
However, I am sad about closing up my business here and
all that I’ve built and grown over the past 2.5 years. In fact, I have put off
writing this post for longer than I should have, probably. We are in the thick
of packing up, and getting our house sold, and it really is time to say
goodbye. I just hate to let this go!
I am thankful for all I have learned. It has been an
intense season of learning for me, in all aspects of the business, from growing
flowers for profit, to designing, to marketing and business-related things. I
have loved every bit of it! It has brought me so much joy to share my love of
flowers with you and your loved ones!
Thank you for all of your support. For your orders, yes,
but also for your encouragement! Running a farm and a business are both
endeavors with big ups and downs. I so appreciate all those who have helped me
get up and dust myself off after the myriad of disappointments, and keep going.
Also, for those who have cheered me on through the successes—thank you!
I don’t know what the future holds for my little flower
farm and business, at this point. We have not found a home yet in Oregon, so we
may be renting for awhile—which could make it hard to grow things. We are
homeschooling our kiddos, and I already know that will take up a significant
amount of my time moving forward. So, I don’t know any specifics yet.
What I do know is that I still love flowers! I will
continue growing them and sharing them. There are many different farmer-florist
business models out there. I’ve given some thought to changing directions with
this business when I open back up again—possibly running it as a U-Pick, or a
non-profit (deliver to seniors or hospitals, or….?) At the same time, I truly
love the everyday flowers—seeing the spark of happiness on someone’s face when
they open the door and realize that someone they love has remembered them and
cares about what they’re experiencing—happy or sad. When the time is right to
open back up, I will see what would be the best fit and go from there.
I am truly grateful to have had this experience. I will
be leaving all my flowers behind, but I will bring with me all that I have
learned—along with lots of seeds! :)
Let’s stay in touch!
I will keep my bluebirdflowerfarm Instagram account open and would love
to see you over there!
May 22, 2020
The In-Betweens
Apple blossoms
Just delivered week 3 of my Spring Subscriptions. One more week to go!
This has been such a fantastic experience—I am loving it! It makes me so happy
to share my flowers with people who appreciate them and are excited to receive
them every week. It makes me very tuned in to what is blooming each and every
week, as well, and where I have gaps to fill. Just for my own note-taking, it’s
time I make a list of what I have had blooming each week so far, along with
ideas for filling in more of those gaps.
I’m going to list the date from each Thursday, as that’s
when I have been and will be cutting blooms for subscriptions. I put in all
caps what I had the most of in a given week.
Week of:
April 9: Earliest daffodils (too small to
harvest for subs)
April 16: Frittilaria meleagris—still pretty
short, 8-10” (kept growing taller each week, until eventually 2+ feet!)
April 23: DAFFODILS (most in gooseneck stage
probably 4-5 days earlier.)
April 30: Early tulips, fully open. (Would
need to harvest earlier if to be used for subs/cuts—so maybe 4-23?). Still
daffodils, hyacinths, and also grape hyacinths. Camassia? (Picked some week of
5-14, but most were done by then.)
** May 7: TULIPS—mid singles (all my orange,
red, and yellows,) and early doubles (my purples). Lilac buds—just swelling and
turning a pretty purple color. Last of the daffodils.
May 14: LILACS. A few late tulips, including
parrots. First of the perennial bachelor’s buttons and early alliums.
ORNAMENTAL PLUM, apple blossoms, pie cherry.
May 21: PERENNIAL BACHELOR’S BUTTONS.
(Harvested 1 bucket, could have cut 5 or 6 more buckets full.) ALLIUMS (these
were the big purples, most of the smaller haven’t quite bloomed yet but have
buds.) Ornamental plum foliage (blossoms all dropping,) ninebark foliage. 1
early iris blooming (not enough for subs.) Catmint—too short for subs. (I
planted ‘Junior Walker’ to fit into the allotted space better, but if I plant
the regular ‘Walker’s Low’ next time, I’ll bet they would be long enough to
cut.)
Speculation for next week: (May 28): Bearded irises—they
all have buds. More perennial bachelor’s buttons. Hoping for wintered-over
annual BB’s to start up production. Right now have 2 blooms open on those.
Possibly the smaller white alliums, although their stems are still so short!
Will try pulling them, like tulips, and see if that gives me long enough for
subs.
Spring subscription leftovers: lilacs, ornamental plum, and a couple of
short camassias!
A couple of thoughts:
Maybe next year I should offer a 4-week Spring Flower
Subscription from the last Friday in April to the week after Mother’s Day, then
give myself a break during this gap. I’m really hoping my irises will come
through for me next week, but I’m going to be combing through the rest to find
stuff to put with them. I may have to purchase from a fellow farmer to fill out
the bouquets.
All of my peonies have
many buds on them (!) but the only ones that even stand a chance of being ready
for next week’s subscriptions are the Coral Charm out front.
Other flowers with buds
right now: columbine (out front), salvia (still very short), clematis
Flowers I need to plant
more of to fill in this gap are: bearded irises, alliums, and flowering shrubs.
I have leaned pretty heavily on my flowering trees and shrubs for filler during
these early times. I haven’t cut any of the fruit tree branches to put in,
although I would consider it if we had several trees.
I also want to try again
at growing anemones and ranunculus next year, in hopes of them filling in this
mid-May gap.
My cool flowers have
pretty much just sat in their rows and done nothing for the past 6 weeks. I need
to figure out what’s going on with them, because I think they should be
blooming right now to help fill in as well. At least some of them should be.
That’s the point of planting them in April, isn’t it? So I’ll be very
interested to see when they actually start blooming. They are getting bigger
and finally look like they’re growing, but no flowers yet. I think those really
hard freezes mid-April may have set them back quite a bit.
Also, when are my
hundreds of Dutch irises going to bloom? Seriously! I was counting on them to
help a sister out right about now, but I don’t even see buds on them yet. Maybe
they’re waiting for an invitation.
p.s. We are heading out
of town in a week. If my peonies and Dutch irises all bloom while we’re gone I
will be fit to be tied!
** Spring Subscriptions started. Also, Mother’s Day weekend (5-10).
May 13, 2020
First and Last
Last of the daffodils for this year.
This was a great week for us here at
Bluebird Flower Farm! Our Spring Subscription started last Friday. YAY! I’m
always watching for what’s blooming, but last week I was watching everything
like a hawk, I tell you! Particularly the tulips—as I mentioned, tulips blow
open very quickly in the heat, and I knew we were going to have some warm days
mid-week. I needed every tulip I could get my hands on for the subscriptions (x
3) plus 7 Mother’s Day arrangements.
So I was
going out a couple of times per day to pull up any tulips that were ready and
get them in the cool garage. “Ready” meaning “still closed but showing a hint
of color.” I also cut lilac buds and harvested the last of the daffodils, and
the first of the perennial bachelor’s buttons. Fun times. I did end up
purchasing some flowers from a flower farm in Ogden that sells wholesale, which
was great too! Tom grows such beautiful flowers and I was happy to be
supporting a fellow flower farmer. I purchased a little bit of greenery from
the regular wholesaler as well. I had a good mix that was mostly locally grown
blooms. Just a note: as my subscriptions are a harvest share, I used all my own
flowers and filler for those!
I had a lot
of fun putting together arrangements again. I missed that in April! I put
together a few for myself last month, but there’s nothing like making them for
someone else and then seeing the joy they bring to that person when you deliver
them.
This week I’m looking forward to
subscriptions again. It’s going to be a purple week! I’ve got 2 different types
of alliums in bloom, both purple, plus blue violet camassias, baby blue
camassias, and purple perennial bachelor’s buttons. I may even find a few grape
hyacinths (purple and blue as well!) to add in there. My daughter and I
experimented last week, tugging the grape hyacinths down at the base, so that
they come off the bulb itself underground. That gave us another good 6” of
stem, so I think they would be long enough for the subscriptions. For foliage,
I will probably cut the ‘Dart’s Gold’ ninebark that’s so pretty right now, as
well as some of my ornamental plum branches which are flowering.
I want to
add in lilac blooms, but I need to experiment first and make sure I know how to
keep them hydrated. So maybe this week I’ll cut some and try some new tricks
I’ve learned along those lines, and see how long they hold up. Then I can add
them in next week if they don’t wilt in 2 days. The lilac buds were awesome in
last weeks’ bouquets.
We are
working on getting permanent irrigation installed in the garden (pvc pipes
underground that connect to removable drip tape in the beds). That will be
amazing, once we get it going. Then we can leave on vacation and not worry
about everything dying off while we’re gone!
All the
starts I planted out the first week of April are growing, but very slowly. I’m
going to give them some fishy fertilizer this week and see if that won’t give
them a bit of a boost. I need those flowers! C’mon ladies—get a move on! I’ve
got dahlias hardening off, and phlox and statice still inside, that I need to
bump up to 2” blocks this week as well, so I can start hardening them off.
I have found, in our dry and windy climate, that the 3/4”
blocks just don’t do well at all in hardening off stage. If I want anything to
survive past that, they have to be in bigger blocks, or in a plastic cell that
will retain the moisture. I have a bunch of starts in peat pots, as well, but
I’m not a fan. They dry out so quickly, and I think they are wicking moisture
away from the roots of the starts, since the peat pot doesn’t stay moist.
Again, wind. So I have decided from here on out, I will just collect the
plastic 4” pots to reuse in that instance.
Lastly, I need to
purchase some Wall O’ Waters for my kiddos’ tomato plants. They are hardened
off and need to go in the ground soon, but we are still having cold nights.
Again, I don’t want one night of frost to ruin weeks of work keeping those
beauties alive!
Always more to do, right?
What do you have growing right now?
May 2, 2020
Spring Blooms Update
Do you love fancy
daffodils? Do tulips make your whole day brighter? If so, we could be friends!
Spring flowers are
some of my most favorite blooms ever! Maybe it’s the long winter of
nothingness, but when I see those bright colors and frilly edges, it just makes
me so happy!
Such is life.
I mean, I enjoyed
seeing those pretty little flowers every day, don’t get me wrong. I cut a few
to bring inside, but for the most part, I just let them bloom on their own.
Most spring bulbs do better—as far as coming back the next year—if you don’t
cut them.
Also, yes, I need to weed and mulch this area very badly!
Of all my hyacinths
out back, I had 1 small bloom this year, and for some reason—no doubt relating
to the weather—it bloomed on such a short stalk that the florets were basically
still in the ground. That seems fitting for life right now, in a way. Blooming
in the ground. Anyway, I have found that a lot of what I do during the growing
season is hedge my bets against the unpredictability of the weather (as the
frost cloth post attests.) I need to learn more about why that happened so that
I can prevent it next year, if possible.
So this week has been
the week of tulips! During cooler springs, my tulips have lasted for more than
a month. I’m thinking I’ll be lucky to get 2 weeks out of them this year. We’ve
had several days in the 70’s already. Tulips come and go so fast in the heat.
In fact, I’ll show you.
These pink tulips in
the picture above are a variety called ‘Sweet 16.’ They are usually my first
tulips to bloom. Even so, they aren’t generally in bloom at the same time as
those big yellow daffodils—that’s a first this year. This picture was taken
about a week ago. Now the pinks probably have only a couple of days left—if
that—before the petals drop. The next wave, which are dark pink tulips planted
nearby, have also already started blooming. If we get several more hot days,
these gals will probably all be done and gone before Mother’s Day.
About the only way I
know of to stop that situation from happening is to have a cooler. If you
harvest the entire tulip bulb, while the flower is closed but showing color,
you can keep it in a cooler for a long time—weeks—and then as soon as you’re
ready for it, you cut off the bulb and put it into water at room temperature,
and you get the same vase life as freshly cut. Alas, no cooler here yet. Also,
I just barely re-opened for business yesterday. (YAY!) So, I may be purchasing
my tulips from a fellow flower farmer in Ogden this year for Mother’s Day
orders.
(Is it past my bedtime? Probably. Ha!)
Anyway, what else? Oh
yeah—alliums are sending up shoots and my big purples have buds on them again.
Excited for those. All the new ones I planted out in the perennial beds in my
cutting garden are still just green shoots.
Snowdrops were
no-shows this year. I wonder if they got eaten by something.
Grape hyacinths are
so cute! Also, way too short this year to use in any kind of arrangement, even
the minis. It’s okay, though. My 2 year old keeps picking them and bringing
them to me to put in a tiny 3” vase that we have. I’m thinking that once again,
the heat wave is the culprit. I want to experiment with planting a whole bunch
of them in the shade and see how they do.
My lilac bush is
loaded with buds. I have yet to keep those blooms hydrated once cut, even with
every trick in the book. Guess what, though? I recently cut some of the budding
branches and put them in an arrangement. The buds stayed hydrated! I don’t
expect them to open up or anything, but they made for some great texture in my
arrangement.
Oh! One more note
about tulips. The pale yellow and white tulips I had out front—I think they are
‘Jaap Groot’—finally have some decent blooms this year! Quick recap of their
life story: Year 1—eaten by deer all the way down to the ground. Year 2:
recovery year, with maybe 2 very short blooms. Year 3: (right now!) Probably
10-15 tulips blooming at a normal height! YAY!!
I know you’re going
to ask—what did I do to keep the deer away? I will tell you my secret: plastic
forks stuck around the tulip foliage, tines up. I’m not even kidding! The deer
haven’t bothered my tulip flowers—they just love to eat that foliage as it
first comes up. The forks give them a smart poke in the nose when they try that.
So yes, I have forks in all my flowerbeds now, protecting my precious tulips!
**Bonus: find the
fork in the tulip photo above! :)
All right friends, I’ve got to sign off before I say something really goofy. Good night! I mean, see ya.