The Flower Farmer's Year
eBook - ePub

The Flower Farmer's Year

How to grow cut flowers for pleasure and profit

  1. 256 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Flower Farmer's Year

How to grow cut flowers for pleasure and profit

About this book

"I love this book - it's a beautiful yet practical and accessible guide that will help you transform whatever sized patch you have into an abundant oasis of flowers." - Mark Diacono, gardener, food writer and broadcaster. Grow your own cut flowers and you can fill your house with the gorgeous colours and heavenly scents of your favourite blooms, knowing that they haven't travelled thousands of miles - and you can make money while you do it! Combining boundless passion with down-to-earth guidance and practical advice, Georgie Newbery draws on her own experiences as an artisan flower farmer and florist as she takes you through: • how to start a cut-flower patch • what to grow • cutting, conditioning and presenting cut flowers • creating a hedgerow Christmas • starting a cut-flower business • where to sell • marketing and social media • a flower farmer's year planner. Whether you want to grow for your own pleasure or start your own business, The Flower Farmer's Year is the perfect guide.

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Yes, you can access The Flower Farmer's Year by Georgie Newbery in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Biological Sciences & Horticulture. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

The blank canvas – the freshly fenced-off acre of a field – may be an exciting start to building your dream, but can be rather daunting in its emptiness. The trick is to chop your space into carefully planned, manageable chunks, and all of a sudden you’ll have a strategy. Plant your ideas one small seed at a time, and watch them grow and bloom.
The first cutting patch at Common Farm, which was cleared by pigs. Note the soon-to-be wind-protecting curve of native hedging settling in among the buttercups.
You need surprisingly little space to create a really productive cut-flower patch. At a lesson I taught in Northamptonshire recently, we assessed an ordinary-sized domestic garden space and identified a patch of the vegetable garden that would happily turn itself over to flower production.
In a bed of about 3m x 3m (10' x 10'), we saw room for perhaps 15 sweet pea plants, five ammi, five cosmos, five dahlias, five sunflowers, a row of cornflowers, a row of pot marigolds and a row of hare’s ear. There were already roses in a herbaceous border edging the vegetable patch, and the herbs growing at the other end of the garden would make lovely scented foliage for the grower’s posies. Among the group I was teaching were two garden designers, a florist, a baker, a writer, a lady with an allotment who wanted cut flowers for her house, and another who wanted to sell mixed bunches from her front gate. None of these people would call themselves ‘eco-warriors’ – they were simply sensible people who had looked at the inter national cut-flower trade and didn’t like what they saw. They realized that if one is a gardener of any kind, one can grow cut flowers – which will not only satisfy the aesthetic desire for cut flowers in the house, but also feed the bees.
So, you have your dream – or even your patch, your meadow, your corner of a rented field. It’s time to lay out your plot. Go and stand in it, sniff the wind, test the earth, and think hard before you apply the sharp edge of spade to soil. The better planned your plot is, the harder it will work for you.

Plot design and practicalities

Whether you’re planning a single bed for small-scale growing or several acres for commercial production, the same design rules apply. Think carefully about how you will lay out your patch, and you will save yourself time, energy and (most of all) irritation later on. A carefully planned garden will reward you time and again for the work you put into getting the mechanics of it right.

How much space?

If you’re growing to sell at your gate, at farmers’ markets or to local florists, beds of 3m x 1m (10' x 3') will never be too long to walk around or too wide to reach across without treading on. It’s a good idea to begin with one bed cut into three (or three whole beds, and so on), since if your beds are divisible by three, you’re set up for a plant rotation system (see page 21). If you then lay out another bed to the windward side of your first bed, to help with wind protection (see page 19), you are ready to plant a substantial crop in three annual beds and one perennial – all possible in less space than the size of an average allotment.
Cutting your space up into small sections also makes the job less daunting for any grower, as you can achieve great things by dealing with one small section at a time. A great ploughed plain before you is daunting, whereas a series of small areas that can be dealt with one at a time is a list of surmountable challenges.
Our first flower patch – about the size of three allotments – provided enough for us to run plenty of market stalls and do five weddings in that first year.
We had a 6m (20') polytunnel, an effective wind-proofing hedge, and about twelve 3m x 1m (10' x 3') beds.

WHAT WE’VE LEARNED

The space between our beds is too narrow for a tractor mower. Our beds are ‘attractively’ laid out but not consistent in size – giving us uneven lengths to work with. This means we can’t just count the beds and know how much space we have and therefore how many plants we need.
A fan of mulched raised beds ready for planting in spring. While an attractive design, the beds are unequal in length and difficult to get a mower in between – you could be more organized!

What to grow

There’s no need to try to include a wide variety of flowers in your patch. You can be a professional cut-flower farmer and grow as few as ten different varieties – the skill is in being clever about which ones you choose. The advice and recommendations in this book should help with making your choice, but remember that the most important thing is to grow flowers that you love. A patch of something you grow because you think you ought to, but which you don’t love, will be ignored and will cost you money in wasted space. I never grow cleome because I hate the smell and the spines. I could think that I ought to include it, because it’s a classic annual to grow for cut-flower production, but I’ve learned – to my cost in space and time – that I won’t pay it any attention other than to be annoyed by it.
Last year in our garden we planted up two 3m x 1m (10' x 3') beds as follows:
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Bed 1: Lots of Ammi majus (we use a great deal of ammi in our summer flowers) and three rows of cerinthe (a generous cut flower, which we use largely for its glaucous blue-green leaves, but the stems can get straggly so we plant successionally through the summer and put the plants out in small chunks as space fillers).
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Bed 2: A mix of pale blue cornflowers, larkspur, orlaya and annual scabious.
These beds started flowering at the end of May and we cut from them until September – you can expect to get a maximum of two months’ useful production out of an annual plant.
Both the beds have low hedges of young box plants at one end, and one of them has a small hedge of Spiraea japonica ‘Candlelight’ at the other end.
So from just this small planting area we had cut flowers and greenery to take us all through the season. I could have planted fewer ammi and put a stand of sweet peas at one end of that bed instead, and th...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Dedication
  4. Contents
  5. Acknowledgements
  6. Foreword
  7. Introduction: Why grow cut flowers?
  8. Chapter one: Getting started
  9. Chapter two: Annuals
  10. Chapter three: Biennials
  11. Chapter four: Perennials
  12. Chapter five: Bulbs & corms
  13. Chapter six: Shrubs
  14. Chapter seven: Roses
  15. Chapter eight: Dahlias
  16. Chapter nine: Sweet peas
  17. Chapter ten: Herbs
  18. Chapter eleven: Wildflowers
  19. Chapter twelve: Cutting, conditioning & presenting cut flowers
  20. Chapter thirteen: Hedgerow Christmas
  21. Chapter fourteen: Starting a cut-flower business
  22. Chapter fifteen: Where to sell
  23. Chapter sixteen: Marketing & social media
  24. Afterword
  25. Appendix 1: The flower farmer’s year planner
  26. Appendix 2: Plant names
  27. Resources
  28. Index
  29. Copyright
  30. Advertisement