Folgen

  • Episode 754: Slow Flowers Floral Insights and Industry Forecast for 2026
    Feb 4 2026
    https://youtu.be/v7pqI-dII0I?si=kZTRQdoz4Pz9SLW_ As we enter the 13th year of publishing our Slow Flowers Floral Insights and Industry Forecast, new impressions continue to infuse our mindsets and enthuse us. The Year 2026 presents a consequential time in our industry. We have been impacted by economic challenges that affect consumer confidence and spending choices; we’ve been clobbered by supply chain and tariff constraints; and we’ve continued to see consolidation and closures among large-scale players in the marketplace. As we look at “what’s next,” I believe we have even more reasons to feel confidence that Seasonal, local, and sustainably-grown flowers are more than relevant and essential for the present day. During the coming year, when little is certain and the terrain is uneven, consumers are drawn to what they can control. The notion of “Taking Control” is a remedy, an antidote, to the pressures and distractions that abound. As I share the 2026 forecast, you may recognize some of the themes as an affirmation of what’s taking place in your floral enterprise – I would love to hear how this inspires you for the coming year. Debra Prinzing (c) Mary Grace Long photography I recorded my introduction to this episode on Monday morning, February 2nd, just 36 hours after we wrapped up the second annual Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit on January 30th and 31st. It was an unqualified success and the raves for our fabulous presenters and educational content are pouring in. We designed the Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit to inspire and inform, include and instigate, and most of all to provide you with new Ideas for your floral enterprise! One hundred eighteen attendees joined us virtually – from 24 US states and the District of Columbia; from four Canadian provinces; and from Australia, the UK and Chile. What an enriching experience and an affirmation of the power of creativity and community. In addition to 10 hours of floral education designed for growers, florists and farmer-florists, we presented five bonus sessions. Today’s episode is a replay of the session I shared to introduce the 2026 Slow Flowers Floral Insights & Industry Forecast. Working with my frequent collaborator Robin Avni, creative director of BLOOM Imprint, we identified three themes for 2026. We also reviewed this project’s 100 past insights and singled out one primary theme from each year -- 2015 to 2025. There isn’t an expiration date to these insights. They don’t go away; but rather, they evolve, moving from being an alternative or fringe idea towards one that simply reflects a cultural shift toward the mainstream. Thanks so much for joining me today as we journeyed through 12 years and 103 insights to inspire you. As we move forward, new topics of interest in the Slow Flowers Movement will continue to be leading edge, ones that early-adopters embrace and ones on which you’ll put your own spin. They also will reflect an evolution that may be subtler and less over-the-top as more people in floristry and flower farming learn from one another, and adopt our values as their own. Please let me know if any of this resonates with you and thanks for joining me in the conversation! A special thanks to Robin Avni for co-producing this year’s report. We’ll have the full report to share as a PDF with links in the coming days. Slow Flowers Podcast LIVE at the NWFGF Click here to RSVP and secure your seat in the LIVE audience! After connecting with so many of you virtually, I’m excited to share that we have a great opportunity for you to connect with me and so many other Slow Flowers member at Slow Flowers Podcast LIVE at the Northwest Flower & Garden Festival, February 18-21, 2026. For the first time ever, you are invited to join the studio audience to watch and listen during a recording of the Slow Flowers Podcast with Debra Prinzing. The tapings take place once per day, during the Festival. Meet four Slow Flowers Members who will be in Seattle to lecture at the festival and promote her new garden or floral book coming out this spring.The guests include - Briana Bosch, Blossom & Branch Flower Farm (Colorado), with new book: The Regenerative Gardener's Handbook; Theresa Sabankaya, theresasabankaya.com (California), with new book: Modern Florigraphy; Janice Cox, Natural Beauty at Home (Oregon), with new book: Beautiful Roses; and Elizabeth Brown, Foxglove Farmhouse (Maine), with new book: The Beginner's Cut Flower Garden.SLOW FLOWERS PODCAST LIVE Entry is FREE to Slow Flowers Members (guests are welcome) BYOC: Bring your own hot beverage or cold drink. Click here to RSVP and secure your seat in the LIVE audience! Thank you to our Sponsors This show is brought to you by slowflowers.com, the free, online directory to more than 700 florists, shops, and studios who design with local, seasonal and sustainable flowers and to the farms that grow those blooms. It’s the conscious choice for buying and sending flowers. ...
    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    45 Min.
  • Episode 753: Ten Years Later, Revisiting the Story of Stars of the Meadow Flower Farm with Marybeth Wehrung
    Jan 28 2026
    https://youtu.be/aGuwB5HbiKs?si=-4q1L4xSFOv9DCys There’s an Instagram trend going around as we flash back to 2016, sharing highlights from one decade ago. Today’s episode does just that, as I reunite with Hudson Valley farmer-florist Marybeth Wehrung of Stars of the Meadow Flower Farm. In 2016, I visited Marybeth, toured her farm, and interviewed her about the emerging local floral scene in her region. Today, many of those dreams of creating a hub for seasonal and sustainably-grown flowers have come to life. Learn how Marybeth has manifested a more sustainable future for her farm by finding new and larger land and negotiating a 10-year lease, which ensures stability and allows for growth into on-farm retail and higher-value crops. It’s a fun reunion and I’m so happy to share it with you today. Marybeth Wehrung of Stars of the Meadow Flower Farm in Stone Ridge, New York Based in Stone Ridge, New York, Stars of the Meadow Flower Farm offers locally and sustainably grown specialty cut flowers and foliage to market goers, florists, event designers, retailers and DIY Wedding couples in the mid-Hudson Valley. Inspired by permaculture, biodynamics, and regenerative agriculture, Marybeth Wehrung and her team grow over 60 seasonal varieties of lush, vibrant blooms, foliage, and herbs on just over one queer-femme-powered acre. The vibrant and prolific flower fields at Stars of the Meadow Flower Farm Stars of the Meadow uses organic, no-till methods to grow flowers on a human scale, without machinery. Marybeth has made it her mission to grow high quality floral material to contribute towards a regional floral supply, and to provide an alternative to the chemically driven global floral trade. Marybeth is a farmer-florist whose designs are seasonal and stunning! A few weeks ago, Marybeth and I were able to reunite while in Albuquerque to attend the ASCFG conference. What a treat to see her again and to reminisce about the trajectory that has propelled Stars of the Meadow over the past decade. While Marybeth has farmed for about 15 years, she transitioned from growing veggies and medicinal herbs to cut flower farming about 12 years ago. Stars of the Meadow has come so far and I loved catching up with her story. Find and follow Stars of the Meadow on Instagram and Facebook Last Day to Grab Your Slow Flowers Summit Registration!! Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit 2026 speaker lineup Today, Wednesday, January 28th, is the final day that you can register for the Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit. We are super excited to “go live” with the 10 hours of floral education starting this Friday, January 30th. There is still time to get in on the action – if you grab your registration by midnight Pacific Time today – and join more than one hundred attendees at our two-day online conference. The program includes 13 amazing speakers who will share their flower growing, design, and business expertise. If you’ve been sitting on the fence, here is just one more nudge to prompt you to register. Use LETSDOTHIS for a last-minute 10% discount on all ticket levels. Remember, Slow Flowers members already receive $50 off their registration and all registrants with US addresses will receive a spring-flowering tree from our lead sponsor, My Patio Tree – a $199 value, which means attending the Summit practically pays for itself! One more reminder. The sessions will be available for replay for three months, through the end of April, so you can watch at your leisure and rewatch to capture all the information our instructors will share. Last Chance - Save 10% Off with LETSDOTHIS promo code for the Slow Flowers Summit Thank you to our Sponsors! This show is brought to you by slowflowers.com, the free, online directory to more than 700 florists, shops, and studios who design with local, seasonal and sustainable flowers and to the farms that grow those blooms. It’s the conscious choice for buying and sending flowers. Thank you to our lead sponsor, Flowerbulb.eu and their U.S. lily bulb vendors. One of the most recognizable flowers in the world, the lily is a top-selling cut flower, offering long-lasting blooms, year-round availability, and a dazzling petal palette. Flowerbulb.eu has partnered with Slow Flowers to provide beautiful lily inspiration and farming resources to help growers and florists connect their customers with more lilies. Learn more at Flowerbulb.eu. A special thank you and welcome to our newest major sponsor, My Patio Tree. My Patio Tree provides Expertly Grown Plants, Perfectly Designed to Elevate Your Garden. This second-generation family tree farm has curated the best-performing, cutting-edge, multi-zone varieties to enhance your garden, patio or special event. Every tree purchased supports Plant With Purpose, a nonprofit organization that restores hope by reversing global poverty and environmental damage. Learn more at mypatiotree.com. And thank you to the Association of Specialty Cut Flowers. The ASCFG...
    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    49 Min.
  • Episode 752: Deb Majerus and Joel MacDonald of Minnesota’s Iron Butterfly Flower Farm
    Jan 21 2026
    https://youtu.be/qge-cJ0Z_XU On a sweet, 6-acre country parcel in Rochester, Minnesota, Deb Majerus and Joel MacDonald are creating a place of beauty and sanctuary, spreading joy to their community as an oasis just beyond busy roads, paving and residential developments all around. Minnesota natives who dated in high school and reunited years later, Deb and Joel grow spring perennials, peonies, and specialize in native plants for floral design and to create a more welcoming, regenerative habitat for their farm. I sat down with this engaging couple recently to hear more about their story and the path that led them to flower farming, inspired by their passion for the Slow Flowers Movement and their growing expertise in the benefits of native plants. Meet Helen, Joel’s van from high school given to him by his grandparents, named for Grandma Helen. Deb & Joel went on some dates in this van in H.S. At Iron Butterfly Flower Farm, native flowers and sustainable regenerative practices are at the heart of everything Deb Majerus and Joel MacDonald are doing. Their passion for the native flora and fauna of Minnesota, has prompted them to grow native flowers, grasses, trees, and shrubs to support beneficial insects with pollen and nectar, and to provide habitat and food for songbirds and pollinators. Iron Butterly Flower Farm grows a variety of native species from early spring ephemerals to showy mid-summer blooms to late autumn sources of nectar for pollinators. Deb Majerus Joel MacDonald They offer spring bouquet subscriptions, DIY wedding and event flowers, farm tours and workshops, and sell seasonally at the Rochester Farmers’ Market. We originally met in person when Deb and Joel attended the Slow Flowers Summit in 2024, held in Banff, Alberta, Canada, and we published Deb's article, "Growing Native Plants to Combat Climate Change," in the 2024 Slow Flowers Journal – see "Native Flora" below. Read the full issue here The three of us reunited last week in Albuquerque, where we attended the ASCFG conference. I set up a little recording studio in my hotel room and they joined me to share their story. Joel MacDonald and Deb Majerus of Iron Butterfly Flower Farm Find and follow Iron Butterfly Flower Farm on Instagram and Pinterest Also, if you’re looking for ideas that might inspire you to add more workshops, check out “The Art of Seasonal Flowers,” a 10-workshop series that Iron Butterfly Flower Farm has just announced, offering many ways for their community to learn about and engage with local flowers. From sun-printed botanicals to a culinary session focused on edible flowers to hand-carved block printing inspired by the farm – these are really creative ideas packaged in a beautiful way. Plus, the series generates revenue, brings people to the farm, and deepens relationships with return customers. Check it out. Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit 2026 speaker lineup If you’re listening to this podcast on its release day – January 21st, we’re just 9 days from the Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit. We are super excited to “go live” with the 10 hours of floral education starting next Friday, January 30th. We are back for Year Two and coming to you virtually to deliver inspiration and education during the two-day online conference. The program 13 speakers near and far – at an incredible rate for $289 general registration. Remember, Slow Flowers members receive $50 off their registration at $239. All registrants with US addresses will receive a spring-flowering tree from our lead sponsor, My Patio Tree – a $199 value, which means attending the Summit practically pays for itself! One more reminder. The sessions will be available for replay for three months, through the end of April, so you can watch at your leisure and rewatch to capture all the information our instructors will share. Find all the details in our show notes or visit slowflowerssummit.com. Click to Register and Join the Summit on Jan. 30-31 Thank you to our Sponsors This show is brought to you by slowflowers.com, the free, online directory to more than 700 florists, shops, and studios who design with local, seasonal and sustainable flowers and to the farms that grow those blooms. It’s the conscious choice for buying and sending flowers. Thank you to our lead sponsor, Flowerbulb.eu and their U.S. lily bulb vendors. One of the most recognizable flowers in the world, the lily is a top-selling cut flower, offering long-lasting blooms, year-round availability, and a dazzling petal palette. Flowerbulb.eu has partnered with Slow Flowers to provide beautiful lily inspiration and farming resources to help growers and florists connect their customers with more lilies. Learn more at Flowerbulb.eu. Thank you to Johnny's Selected Seeds, an employee-owned company that provides our industry the best flower, herb and vegetable seeds -- supplied to farms large and small and even backyard cutting gardens like mine. ...
    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    49 Min.
  • Episode 751: Ranunculus Growing Secrets with Brooke Palmer of Jenny Creek Flowers
    Jan 14 2026
    https://youtu.be/WO7OgXBJtks?si=hA2AbAvNFiOTBN1q According to Brooke Palmer, the ranunculus is THE iconic bloom of early springtime. A seasoned grower and owner of Jenny Creek Flowers, based outside of Ithaca, in New York’s Finger Lakes Region, Brooke grows a wide array of specialty cut flowers that she sells through her flower CSA and a seasonal U-Pick program. Students take her workshops in person, including a successful dahlia-growing course, and she sells bulbs, tubers and plants to avid gardeners. After trialing the best ways to grow ranunculus, Brooke has landed on a successful approach that tailors her methods to the grower, depending on issues like zone and geography. Last week, Brooke revealed her ranunculus-growing secrets with the Slow Flowers community during our monthly meet-up session. Today, you’re in luck, because we’re sharing the replay recording from that session. Learn Brooke’s tips and techniques for success with growing ranunculus, the gorgeous, spring-blooming flower. Brooke Palmer of Jenny Creek Flowers In 2024, Brooke Palmer of Jenny Creek Flowers shared her approach to growing winter tulips. We hosted her on a podcast episode after she contributed a wonderful article to the Slow Flowers Journal. This high school English teacher-turned-flower farmer is a researcher at heart. So it was no surprise when Brooke told me that she recently packaged her ranunculus-growing lessons into a new online course. Ranunculus from Jenny Creek Flowers Brooke narrates the romance of ranunculus this way: You step into your garden on a cool spring morning, coffee in hand — and there they are. Ranunculus you grew yourself. Layered, ruffled, so beautiful they almost don’t seem real. You pause; everything else slipping away as you think: “I did this.” For anyone who has dreamed of growing beautiful ranunculus, Brooke wants to show you how -- with a simple, clear path. As a ranunculus super-fan, Brooke brings more than 20 years as an educator and teacher to her work. She likes to break things down into simple, doable steps — the same way she taught students and supported teachers for two decades. Since moving from longtime gardener to full-time flower farmer, Brooke says she learned to grow ranunculus the hard way — years of trial and error and more lost corms than she cares to admit. When things finally clicked for her, Brooke turned her insights about what worked into a clear, step-by-step path so others don’t have to figure it out alone. Join me today and gain inspiration and confidence to plant your own beautiful ranunculus. You’ll also find a link to a free ranunculus quiz: Should you Fall-Plant Ranunculus or Wait Until Spring? We're excited to see more ranunculus arrangements out in the world and I’m just going to reiterate the wish I spoke out loud during last week’s Meet-Up session. I would LOVE to see a botanical couture look created with fresh ranunculus blooms as part of our 2026 American Flowers week floral fashion collection. Just putting it out there. If this idea appeals to you, please reach out! Can’t you just see how dreamy that would look?! Follow Jenny Creek Flowers on Instagram and Facebook Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit is coming! The countdown continues because our Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit is coming up in less than three weeks! We are back for Year Two and coming to you virtually to deliver inspiration and education during the two-day online conference. The program includes 10 hours of education from 13 speakers near and far – an incredible rate for $289 general registration. Remember, Slow Flowers members receive $50 off their registration at $239. All registrants with US addresses will receive a spring-flowering tree from our lead sponsor, My Patio Tree – a $199 value, which means attending the Summit practically pays for itself! Find all the details in our show notes or visit slowflowerssummit.com. Join us at the Slow Flowers Summit Thank you to our SPONSORS This show is brought to you by slowflowers.com, the free, online directory to more than 700 florists, shops, and studios who design with local, seasonal and sustainable flowers and to the farms that grow those blooms. It’s the conscious choice for buying and sending flowers. Thank you to our lead sponsor, Flowerbulb.eu and their U.S. lily bulb vendors. One of the most recognizable flowers in the world, the lily is a top-selling cut flower, offering long-lasting blooms, year-round availability, and a dazzling petal palette. Flowerbulb.eu has partnered with Slow Flowers to provide beautiful lily inspiration and farming resources to help growers and florists connect their customers with more lilies. Learn more at Flowerbulb.eu. Thank you to Longfield Gardens, which provides home gardeners with high quality flower bulbs and perennials. Their online store offers plants for every region and every season, from tulips and daffodils to dahlias, caladiums and amaryllis. Check out the full ...
    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    50 Min.
  • Episode 750: Susan Chambers of San Francisco-based bloominCouture – a luxury florist designs with seasonal and local flowers
    Jan 7 2026
    https://youtu.be/0HFUC-qb-3Q?si=ftg-AyUSDwYRpKoV Luxury floral designer Susan Chambers, owner of San Francisco-based bloominCouture. She’s a longtime Slow Flowers member whose high-end residential and corporate clients support her sustainable values, which do not compromise her design aesthetic or her approach to seasonal sourcing. Many of you first met Susan when she and her shop appeared in our 2021 book, Where We Bloom. Since opening doors of her postage-stamp-sized storefront in San Francisco’s Russian Hill neighborhood in early 2020, Susan has provided bespoke florals with an emphasis on locally-grown, foam-free designs. Later, she expanded bloominCouture to include a production and workshop space, just one door down, where a team of designers works daily to fulfill standing orders from a number of luxury retailer brands and residential clients. You’ll be inspired listening to Susan and watching her process ~ I know I was! Susan Chambers featured in Where We Bloom I have been saving today’s podcast to share with you since I filmed it in early October, and it feels like the first week of 2026 is an ideal time to share this beautiful dose of New Year’s design inspiration with our community. bloominCouture's floral arrangement featuring seasonal California-grown botanicals My guest, Susan Chambers, owns San Francisco-based bloominCouture, a jewel box of a flower and gift shop. That’s where she hosted a book-signing event for “The Flower Farmers” in early October. A highlight of this episode includes Susan’s design demonstration of a low, lush centerpiece and a conversation about her maximal approach of layering color upon color; texture upon texture. You’ll want to both listen and watch this episode – and enjoy every moment. Local roses for Susan Chambers' design demonstration Susan is a California native and former global fashionista who moved from couture to flowers by studying with the top master florists both in the U.S. and in London. Susan brings her vision, honed by her McQueens Flower School of London training, experiences living overseas, years working in high fashion and her passion for finding beauty in all organic materials to creating truly bespoke arrangements. Susan is a proud member of the Slow Flowers community and committed to sustainability. The focus of bloominCouture is to combine the beauty and aesthetics of a proper European luxury florist with the relaxed elegance of California living, in the heart of San Francisco. Find and follow Susan Chambers at bloominCouture on Instagram and Facebook LISTEN to my past interview with Susan Chambers: March 1, 2023Episode 599: Sustainable Luxury Floral Design with Susan Chambers of San Francisco’s bloominCouture Join Us on January 9th: Learn about RANUNCULUS! Learn successful ranunculus-growing techniques from Brooke Palmer (Jenny Creek Flowers) Coming up this Friday, January 9th, we’re returning to our ongoing Slow Flowers Member Meet-Ups! The timely topic of our January Meet-Up will help jump-start your early-spring floral enterprise. Brooke Palmer of Jenny Creek Flowers will present 'LET'S GROW RANUNCULUS." Brooke will share her practical tips and expert advice to help you grow beautiful ranunculus. Bring your questions!P.S., we'll have a drawing for one free spot in Brooke's upcoming course: Grow Ranunculus This Spring: A Step-by-Step Course for Stunning Blooms. Join us this Friday, January 9th (9:00 a.m. PT/Noon ET). We hope to see you there! Click to Pre-register and Join us on January 9th (9 am PT/Noon ET) Lowest Slow Flowers Summit Pricing Expires on January 11th Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit 2026 speaker lineup And there are just a few more days to take advantage of our New Year-New You gift -- a special $50 Off savings when you register for the Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit. We are back for Year Two and coming to you virtually to bring you inspiration and education during the two-day online conference. The program includes 10 hours of education from 13 speakers near and far – an incredible rate for $289 general admission and $239 for Slow Flowers members. You can register for an additional $50 off – now through January 11th with the Promo Code: $50OFFWORLDWIDE Learn from some amazing creative professionals, thought leaders, and voices of sustainability as part of the progressive Slow Flowers Community. Learn more in our show notes or visit slowflowerssummit.com. Register NOW and save $50 for Best Ticket Pricing Thank you to our Sponsors This show is brought to you by slowflowers.com, the free, online directory to more than 700 florists, shops, and studios who design with local, seasonal and sustainable flowers and to the farms that grow those blooms. It’s the conscious choice for buying and sending flowers. Thank you to our lead sponsor, Flowerbulb.eu and their U.S. lily bulb vendors. One of the most recognizable flowers in the world, the lily is a top-selling cut flower, offering ...
    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    35 Min.
  • Episode 749: Floral Tourism visits historic gardens and modern-day flower festivals of Holland and Belgium, with Debra Prinzing, Lorene Edwards Forkner and Lois Moss
    Dec 31 2025
    https://youtu.be/NilyUEdksYA?si=G8oSgsVXGSVQPzlz As a special year-end episode of the Slow Flowers Podcast, you’re invited to join me today in conversation with garden tour producer Lois Moss, and my dear friend, Lorene Edwards Forkner, artist, author, and regular contributor to the Seattle Times. Together, we are planning a one-of-a-kind botanical tour in Spring 2026 – a unique Slow Flowers Experience that takes us to Holland and Belgium in April for a 7-day river boat cruise, plus several optional floral excursions and festivals.Here at Slow Flowers, we declared Floral Tourism a top insight in 2017 and in the subsequent nine years leading up to 2026, the allure of traveling and touring floral and garden destinations has been an important facet of our profession. Part education and research; part rest and retreat, when we visit botanical gardens, flower farms, and floral festivals, there’s something vital about these experiences. Tourism combined with fellow flower and garden lovers enriches our lives far beyond connecting with nature.We’re getting excited and you’re invited to join me on this special tour this coming spring. Seek new inspiration as you engage with the world and explore creative expression in 2026 – and listen on for updates because there’s new pricing just announced for the cruise portion of the tour. Come to Holland and Belgium with Slow Flowers during tulip season! I took my first trip to Amsterdam in 2005 when I joined a press tour for a small group of garden writers during tulip season. It was an unforgettable experience. The flowers, landscapes, and floral designs left a lasting impression on my own aesthetic and deepened my love of bulb gardening and designing with those blooms. Last year, in 2024, I returned, visiting Amsterdam during Dutch Lily Days! That journey greatly influenced my newfound love affair with lily gardening and floral design with lilies. Lorene Edwards Forkner (left) and Debra Prinzing (right) Imagine my delight to now be planning an intimate, customized garden and floral tour that I will co-host with Lois Moss of Tour 2 Explore More and our artist-in-residence Lorene Edwards Forkner, author of Color In and Out of the Garden. Yes, we are heading to Holland and Belgium for a very special excursion that is 100% tailored to the garden, flower, and art lover. Ama Waterways riverboat I’ve always wanted to take a European river cruise. Combining some of Holland's and Belgium’s most exclusive gardens and floral venues with traveling onboard an AmaWaterways ship will be truly special. Lois, Lorene, and I will take you to inspiring garden and floral destinations and cultural sights, with custom shore excursions for our group. Lois has developed and led numerous international tours and we are in great hands with Tour 2 Explore More. Slow Flowers Experiences go to Holland and Belgium. The charming map at right was illustrated by our very own Jenny M. Diaz Floral figures on a Bloemencorso parade float The main tour will be April 19-29 and includes a 7-night river cruise with custom shore excursions plus 3 nights in the charming city of Utrecht. There will be an optional 2 day pre-tour for those who want to experience the famous Bloemencorso Bollenstreek flower parade on Saturday night. And if you just want to join us for just the 7-night cruise, that option is now available. Our group pricing is more than $1,000 lower than the regular retail price. AmaWaterways is a fan favorite and their river cruises get rave reviews for their gourmet food and all-inclusive shore excursions Registration for the tour and the $1000 discount is only available until January 20. Act soon if you want to join us! Today’s episode dives deep into the destinations and details about the river cruise, the gardens, and floral excursions, and more. Lorene and I joined Lois to look at the tour route as we discuss our excitement and address some frequently-asked questions from our travelers. Color studies with Lorene Edwards Forkner Thanks so much for joining me today! In addition to learning about gardens and floral design with Debra, Lorene will bring an artist's sensibility to our tour! With Lorene's personal approach to "seeing," you will explore the power of language and mark-making to enlarge your travel experience. You’ll be inspired to capture garden moments and memories with a variety of simple prompts to pique curiosity and hone observation. No previous experience necessary. Floral performers at Bloemncorso parade All the tour details are covered in the show notes and you can always reach out to Lois to get your questions answered. I’ve included her information in our show notes, as well as an updated link to reserve your cabin on our tour! Registration for the tour and the $1000 discount is only available until January 20. Act soon if you want to join us! Click here for more details Countdown to the Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit 2026 ...
    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    50 Min.
  • Episode 748: Flowers & Ceramics, creating a floral enterprise that combines one artist’s passions, with Michelle Hartney
    Dec 24 2025
    https://youtu.be/VminWzvUNIk In 2018, we named Slow Pottery one of our ten floral insights of the year, and the interest in combining locally-grown flowers with curated pottery and vase collections has only continued to gain momentum. The demand for American-made pottery first caught our attention in a 2015 New York Times article titled “The Budding Ceramics-to-Table Movement,” with the subtitle: “Why handmade ceramics are white hot.” The story noted that ” . . . the rejection of factory-produced sameness in dinnerware and vases reflects a desire to get back to something more essential.”Over the past decade, Slow Pottery has continued to be a theme of interest in the Slow Flowers movement. We hosted several of our members who make pottery or collaborate with ceramic artists in 2023, for a Slow Flowers Member Meet-Up, highlighting the importance of artisan pottery for artisan bouquets. Clearly, we LOVE this topic! And today’s guest, Michelle Hartney, owner of a Chicago-based micro flower farm and a ceramics studio, brings it all together, melding and harmonizing all of her interests and talents in an inspiring conversation that you’ll love and learn from. Michelle Hartney of Flowers & Ceramics This is a perfect episode to watch while you’re cozied up for the winter holiday week, because if you’re like me, you’re already beginning to fill your notebook with lists of ideas for the New Year – may you have a bit of quiet time this week to do just that, as you dream and imagine your own list of goals for 2026. Perhaps, making Slow Pottery that helps your Slow Flowers shine is on that list – for me, today’s guest is the catalyst for that exercise! Michelle Hartney of Flowers and Ceramics in her Chicago micro farm Michelle Hartney is an artist, activist, and flower farmer based in Chicago’s Logan Square neighborhood, where she creates handmade ceramics and grows specialty cut flowers. Her work is grounded in a deep connection to both the land and the materials she uses—everything begins with her hands in either clay or soil. Handmade pottery by Flowers and Ceramics Working primarily with stoneware, Michelle combines wheel-throwing and hand-building techniques to create both functional objects and sculptural works. Many of her vases are designed with specific blooms in mind, shaped to hold a particular stem or to echo the natural gesture of a plant. Flowers and Ceramics, an urban micro farm in Chicago After learning about the floral industry’s impact on climate change, Hartney began merging her love of flowers, art, and activism into a single practice. She grows flowers on her micro-flower farm in Chicago and hydroponically in her basement, offering flower subscriptions to her local community. Through this work, she aims to raise awareness about the flower industry’s carbon footprint, provide ethically grown flowers year-round, and spread beauty as an act of resistance and care. Flowers and Ceramics dahlia patch Among other influences, Michelle says her practice is deeply influenced by the Slow Flowers Movement, which resonates strongly within her own mission to connect art, ecology, and activism through the language of flowers. I’m so excited to share today’s conversation with you – as the art of growing flowers and the art of designing with flowers converge with Michelle’s hand-made vessels! Flowers and Ceramics sidewalk flower stand Thanks so much for joining me today! I am moved by what she writes on her website: “Each ceramic piece I create is either wheel-thrown or hand-built in a beautiful studio in Chicago. I love working with white stoneware and I'm interested in designing vases with integrated flower frogs to eliminate the need for toxic floral foam or wasteful chicken wire when creating arrangements.” Flowers and Ceramics -- artisan flowers and artisan vesselw -- this photo says it all Find and Follow Flowers and Ceramics on Instagram and Facebook Follow Michelle Hartney Art on Instagram Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit news 2026 Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit Speakers Things are getting exciting as we approach 2026, when the second online edition of our Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit takes place ONLINE January 30-31 – and I hope you check out the details in our show notes – or just log onto slowflowerssummit.com to register. The reason I say things are getting exciting, is that I’ve been working closely with all of our presenters, as they prepare and film their presentations for you. From Shane Connolly and Cel Robinson in the UK to presenters across the country – all Slow Flowers members – you will gain more than 10 hours of flower growing and designing education for just $289 (and remember, Slow Flowers members always receive a discounted registration – this year, that will be $239). And hey, thanks to the $199 gift of a flowering tree, which our lead sponsor, mypatiotree.com will send you, this conference practically pays for itself. And,...
    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    1 Std. und 9 Min.
  • Episode 747: Jennifer Gulizia of The Flowering Farmhouse on dahlia breeding, podcasting, filming a documentary and building a flower farm from the ground up
    Dec 17 2025
    https://youtu.be/iDXNEEP74dg?si=95xtQpkBIExFdBQd You may be familiar with today’s guest, Jennifer Gulizia of The Flowering Farmhouse and The Backyard Bouquet Podcast. Like many of us, Jennifer’s story began in her own garden, as her flower-growing fascination naturally melded with her professional photography career. In 2019, she and her husband, T.J., built a modern farmhouse on a 1/3-acre lot, in Oregon’s Hood River. While it was not enough space for a true flower farm, Jennifer planted almost 200 dahlias and eventually leased more land from her neighbors to expand. Join me on a visit to The Flowering Farmhouse to learn about the newest chapter of Jennifer’s story. Seven seasons in and Jennifer and T.J. have sold their modern farmhouse and purchased a 20-acre parcel outside Hood River to undertake its restoration and regeneration. At the same time, Jennifer has partnered with a documentary filmmaker and they are developing an ambitious project to document the story in a film with the working title of “Where We Bloom.” There’s a lot to learn from this educator and fellow Slow Flowers advocate! Jennifer Gulizia of The Flowering Farmhouse Jennifer Gulizia hosted me as a guest on The Backyard Bouquet Podcast this past May, which how we got to know one another and how I began to understand her personal journey to flowers. So a few months later, while returning home to Seattle from a weekend in Oregon, I made a detour to visit Jennifer and meet her in person. She had invited me to record an interview about the Slow Flowers Movement for her ambitious documentary film project about the restoration of The Flowering Farmhouse farm. Of course, I wanted to turn the tables on Jennifer and interview her for the Slow Flowers Podcast. Mind you, there’s little infrastructure on this land, as Jennifer, T.J., and their young daughter Olivia, are starting over and do not live on the property. We filmed on a hot, windy summer day, so you’ll hear a bit of nature in the background during my tour and our sit-down interview. I’m happy to share this two-part interview, which includes a walking tour of one flower-filled acre, just planted in 2025, and a conversation recorded under one of the few large trees on the property. Together, we discuss Jennifer’s vision and imagine the possibilities it represents. Dahlia fields at The Flowering Farmhouse As Jennifer writes in a blog post: In September 2024, “our family became stewards of a fallow, forgotten 20-acre field in Hood River, Oregon. This land did not look like much, but it felt like possibility. After losing the leased land we had farmed since 2019 at the end of 2023, we found ourselves starting over from scratch. Becoming caretakers of this new property was an act of hope, resilience, and trust in what could someday bloom here.” Dahlia Tubers with Jennifer Gulizia Jennifer Gulizia is both a flower farmer and dahlia hybridizer. She is host of The Backyard Bouquet Podcast and leads The Dahlia Patch, an online learning community for flower lovers. Through her teaching and storytelling, Jennifer helps gardeners rediscover the joy of growing with intention... where beauty, meaning, and resilience take root. The vision for The Flowering Farmhouse Find and follow Jennifer at these social places:Website: https://thefloweringfarmhouse.com IG: https://www.instagram.com/thefloweringfarmhouse/ FB: https://www.facebook.com/thefloweringfarmhouse/ Podcast: https://thefloweringfarmhouse.com/the-backyard-bouquet-podcast/ Documentary: https://thefloweringfarmhouse.com/2024/10/28/regenerative-flower-farm-documentary/ Jennifer, T.J., and Olivia "Where We Bloom" is the working title for Jennifer’s documentary. Its Mission is to show how local flowers restore land, strengthen communities, and reconnect people with the beauty of the natural world. This film follows Jennifer and her family as they rebuild a regenerative flower farm and will invite viewers to believe in the impact of growing blooms close to home. If this story resonates with you and you'd like to support the documentary, you can make a tax-deductible donation through the film’s fiscal sponsor, the International Documentary Association (IDA).You can donate directly at: https://wherewebloom.allyrafundraising.com/ Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit 2026 2026 Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit Speakers Things are getting exciting as we approach 2026, when the second online edition of our Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit takes place ONLINE January 30-31 – and I hope you check out the details in our show notes – or just log onto slowflowerssummit.com to register. The reason I say things are getting exciting, is that I’ve been working closely with all of our presenters, as they prepare and film their presentations for you. From Shane Connolly and Cel Robinson in the UK to presenters across the country – all Slow Flowers members – you will gain more than 10 hours of flower growing and designing ...
    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    58 Min.