Blooming Surprises: Latest News from the Flower Shed

The gardens are ramping up and only half are planted. The high tunnel is going gang busters and miracles of miracles the anemone are starting to bud up! I had written them off in my head thinking “oh well, thee is always next year” but lo and behold, I will have two for show and tell on Tuesday. By Friday, I might even have a bunch to sell. Amazing. The next most amazing thing happening at the farm is that I also have a ranunculus bud, and that crop I had really written off, but surprises do happen Allie. No photos, you have to come see them for yourself!

Did I say that you have to come Tuesday to see the flowers yourself? That is right. I’m beginning open flower shed on Tuesdays now, from 2-6. I will have plenty of flowers now to support two open days a week. What that also means is no more flowers at Cranberry Meadow Farm. It worked out really well for the winter months when many of you didn’t want to drive to Hancock, and I only had tulips to offer, and only four varieties a week to that, but now there is so much more to offer. So, thank you very much Carolyn for allowing this to happen, and hopefully we will be able to do it again next late winter early spring.

You might be asking what is happening on the farm now in mid May. Well, so glad you asked. The tulips are completely harvested!

Empty tulip beds . Add a smile emoji

That doesn’t mean the end of the tulips by any stretch of the imagination. No, they are all safely tucked in the cooler, away from the vagaries of the weather. They will be processed just before you get them so they will be fresh.

This was last week. Tonight it is full. Can you say tulip?

The beauty about this system is I can process the day before an open flower shed day what I think I will sell, and you will have the perfect tulip. Imagine, tulips neat, tulips with the cool flowers that are coming on, tulips with peonies, oh my goodness. I will be honest though, six months of tulips for this flower grower might be a bit much. I am looking forward to new flowers, and they are coming. Soon. Promise.

So if you haven’t been to the flower shed because of distance, here is a look at what I had for sale this week.

Todays, Mother’s Day offerings

I will leave you now but with a few reminders. Tuesday flower shed hours start this week. Shed is open from 2-6, and on Fridays from 9-2 and flowers will now only be available here at the farm.

As usual, I leave you with this weeks arrangement. I had fun with this one. Crabapple, lilac, purple and pink tulips, storm damaged magnolia (yes, I still have some for arrangements), leujocium, narcissus and bleeding heart.

Have I every said how much I love flowers? I love flowers and the joy that they bring.

Until next week. Allie

Spring Blooms: A Floral Update from the Farm

Spring is upon us. After weeks of cold, raw and damp days I think the tide has turned and we are in for great things to come. Finally, but honestly it has been so worth the wait. The narcissus are abundant, the tulips are knocking my socks off with their colors and shapes and even just a handful of flowers make a stunning posey or bouquet. The peonies are rocketing skywards, the lilacs are starting to bloom as well as the other flowering shrubs and the farm can’t be more beautiful right now.

So let’s start with tulips. The harvest has begun and I’m gathering bucket loads and storing them in the cooler to keep them perfect for you. Just look at these beauties.

Today I harvested a single lipstick pink that has fringed edges. Pair that with lilacs, or the narcissus with the pink center, oh my goodness, it doesn’t take much to have a stunning posey or an arrangement to give as a gift.

I have been crazy busy planting in the gardens. Almost all of the cool seedlings are in and, for the most part, are looking good. I might have to replant the snapdragons, maybe I was a bit over anxious, but everything else is in as well as all of the plants I had ordered during the winter. The roses are planted, the chrysanthemums are potted up to get established before they go in the ground and the hellebores are planted. The cool flowers in the tunnel have had the netting put over them so they grow straight and tall. In fact when you look at the garden the entire right side, or rather 90% of the right side is planted. I still have the dahlias to divide, pricking out the seedlings, mulching what isn’t in weed mat, getting chips in the pathways…you know, normal stuff.

So here is a test to see how well you know your flowers. Do you know what flower this is?

I know, it’s not in focus. Is it a rose, a ranunculus, a peony or a tulip? Answer at the end.

This Friday will be the last Friday that flowers will be sent down to Cranberry Meadow. I know that it has been great for me and that you wonderful flower people didn’t have to navigate the roads to come to Hancock to get flowers, but the flower selection is getting really good now, I can offer far more than just tulips. So. After Friday you will have to come to the farm. The good news is then the following week I will be beginning Tuesdays again. Pay attention to the newsletter for more updates. Besides I have really missed not seeing those of you who have been picking up at Cranberry Meadow.

What else? Ah Yes. I will be open on Mother’s Day. Stay tuned, I will give you the hours by Friday. I will have bunches and if I must say so, some beautiful bouquets.

So I think that is about it for now. I thank you from the bottom of my heart for loving my flowers as much as I do. Oh. The answer to the question. It is a tulip, but I know you got that correct.

Until next week, may you dream flowers. Allie

Windowframe Thursday.

The Beauty and Chaos of Spring Planting

The last day of April is here and although most of the month has felt like March, we will see what May brings. I know what May brings, and it will be lots of flowers. The narcissus are rolling in gangbusters and the tulips, after siting for weeks, are ready to be pulled to hold until needed. Whoa, there are some stunners coming in.

Look at that color coming on.

I will soon be awash with color which is very exciting. And look at this stunner,

Gudoshnik Double

All I can say is I think it is going to knock our socks off. The fritillaria are starting to bloom as are the leucojum which are like giant snowdrops. The flowers might be dainty, but they add such a wow factor to any posey.

Being spring, it hasn’t been quiet on the farm. Seeding is going well, many of the heat loving crops are finally being seeded because believe it our not, in 30 days it will be Memorial Day and most of the heat loving annuals will need to be in the ground. Yikes! Will I have enough space? Time will tell. I still have ten? heirloom chrysanthemums to arrive and be planted, plus the five roses that are to arrive on Tuesday, and more hellebore plants. I might be intercropping this year and planting on top of the narcissus once they are harvested. Hopefully they won’t mind if I give them a good feed first. Then I also have to find space for the sprawling pumpkins and gourds. Hmmm, I may not be growing that handful of vegetables this year. The old vegetable garden might become flower garden number two.

The dahlia tubers have all been hauled out of the cool room and are now sitting in the dirty room waiting for me to divide them. They are looking really good and healthy, I would just like to se some eyes before I divide them but it will have to happen in the next few weeks because Memorial Day is looming.

I will leave you with Thursday’s Window frame photo. I find it fitting with the dark grey skies we have been having. It also matches the bruise I have on my hip from something I ran into.

Windowframe Thursday. Fritilarria, hellebore, mertensia, hyacinth and honeysuckle foliage.

Until next week. I hope you will dream flowers. Allie

April 23. Hurry up and Wait

Two weeks ago we had those amazing hot temperatures, remember, in the high seventies? Now we are back to typical April temperatures in the 40’s, raw, windy and the plants and most importantly the tulips are just sitting there. Can you hear me sigh deeply? Very deeply? So this is where we are at. I have 3000 tulips looking not much different from the photo I shared with you last week. Deep sigh. So. What I have done, I harvested three tulips, have brought them inside, and if they open in the next few days, I will harvest more so there will be tulips for Friday. Most important. Read the newsletter. I can control the forced tulips to the week. As we all know, Mother Nature does what she wants. Stay tuned.

Waiting. Insert deep sigh

Meanwhile, I have been busy in other areas of the flower farm. All the sweet peas have been planted. I will say, I didn’t read last year’s notes until they were all planted. The notes said, do half. Oops. Oh well. Everything that has been planted up to this date in the field is looking good. You can even see the seedling now without your magnifying glass. The plants in the high tunnel are also looking good, so good in fact the ranunculus have become a major food group. Insert deep sigh. When I fed the high tunnel (last month?) a mouse had gotten into the cover crop seed, peas and oats and safely hid it in the fertilizer bag. Well, along with feeding the plants with fertilizer, I was also sowing cover crop seed, yum, fresh pea shoots. Almost as yummy as ranunculus foliage. Maybe I am onto something.

The peonies are sprouting, the spring bulbs are rocketing up, the hellebores are being nibbled on, thankfully just the foliage that I can see…I am grateful for today’s soaking rain which is much better than I could ever give the plants. Everything I planted yesterday is now very well watered and the rain tanks are filling. All is good, really, despite a hiccup here and there. It is farming, and one just has to go with the flow. And sigh deeply.

I was asked to do the flowers for Music on Norway Pond‘s event last night. That is why there weren’t any tulips on Friday. They had a role to fill, and fill it they did. My most favorite though was the floral crown made out of tiny spring flowers.

So this is the end of my deep sighing blog post. I leave you with an image from my #windowframethursday post.

Spring. It’s coming

Until next week. Allie

Back to Normal

Whoa. I am not sure what happened last week but those summer temperatures that happened sent me into a tail spin. They were amazing. I know that as a flower farmer I love to push the seasons, like having tulips from Mid February until June? But last week was a doozy. All I could do was keep the water up to everything and keep my fingers crossed. And my toes, and my arms and everything else.

Here is a look at one of the tulip beds. Looking good I think.

Look at those buds!

I will be harvesting tulips this week. Yay! I would guess I will have a couple hundred for you to select from. Lots of doubles, I can tell by the flower buds, and these in the front look like doubles. It has started. Flower craziness. 750 tulips is this bed alone. Whoa! I hope you all love tulips because I will have them coming on strong.

The tulips will be coming on so strong that Tuesdays will soon be added to the Open Flower Shed days. Stay tuned! Keep your eye on the newsletter that I try to send out the night before to let you know what is available. Bouquets!!!! Tulips!!!! Narcissus!!!! Holy Moley!!!!

The flowers in the tunnel are looking good. As usual, a bit of a rodent problem on the ranunculus. Damn. I replanted about 12 today. On the other hand, the ones in the greenhouse are looking good but I have no idea about bloom time, so stay tuned. I will say I have a lovely crop of oats and pea coming up that a kind rodent mixed with the fertilizer. Never dull here I would say.

Cool flowers in tunnel, with oats and peas keeping them company.

Many things that enjoy the cool have been planted out now. All of the perennials, then the Sweet Peas, cornflowers, more agrostemma, clarkia, feverfew, and I don’t even remember at this point. When I look at the beds I see amazing, beautiful flowers. You, even with squinting might say I am looking at what?

Look hard. See the green?

It has been a very productive week though. Lots of planting out, irrigation set out, new beds made…then I have more that are ready to go in this next week that are waiting patiently. Not.

Next to into the ground on Tuesday. Row 2 R

Anyway, I leave you with some floral inspiration.

These are in the wrong order, but it doesn’t take much to make something special. Broken pine branches, a sprig of daphne, the first narcissus, and two yellow tulips and a bit of forsythia. In the small jar, three broken tulips from harvesting, some laurel and alder branches. Not rocket science, just having fun, and you should as well.

I will leave you, and your floral imagination until next week. Allie

PS. Shelly has picked up her tulip experiment. I could feel the flower buds so now all the updates will be up to her. I am pretty excited about it though. Some tweaking on my part, but she will have to fill you in on how it goes.

Happy Easter

I hope the Easter bunny was good to you all and your baskets are overflowing with chocolate eggs and peeps. We had a sunrise dog walk with all of our canine friends and their humans and enjoyed far too many peeps far too early in the morning. Our favorite peep was the Sparkly Berry, or something like that. All that sugar gave us lots of energy to do farm work today. Yay!

The snow has finally melted in the cutting garden and to be honest, it is a little discouraging to see the amount of rodent damage in the beds. Don’t worry, there are still plenty of spring bulbs, but they did dine well on many of the perennials. I know it is early yet and things are slow so I am not worried, nor should you. You know the adage. An empty space in the garden means PLANT SHOPPING, and new things to try to offer you all the best and most interesting cut flowers out there. Let the challenge begin!

So what is happening on the farm. Well if you didn’t know, Tulips. I will have tulips on Friday, it could be just a few, or…. with the forecasted warm weather, could be a bunch more. The in-ground tulips are looking good. I have been watering them but one just never knows and I have very little control over these tulips. The forced tulips are much easier. I more or less know each week what I will have for you, but the in-ground ones? Mother Nature rules on that one and we all know how that goes. So, as usual, pay attention to the newsletter that should come out the night before or the morning of the open flower shed to keep you up to date.

Speaking of tulips, I have just placed the order for next year’s tulips. Let’s just say that was a brain cramping job. How many for each week? Do the colors blend, are they interesting…then do that again for the in ground tulips, but add Mother Nature into the timing. Oh yes. My brain was cramping. Only 9 months before we know how well I did with my choices. I mean it’s tulips in the dead of winter, how bad can my choices be? Don’t answer that.

This week coming is a big week. The first batch of sweet peas are going to be planted, along with all the perennial seedlings and the second batch of cool flowers into the garden. First the beds have to be prepped. Irrigation hooked up, weed mat down, then plants in, watered by hand for a number of weeks, the hoops for sun and cold protection. That will about do me in I figure. But it is all good. Those flowers should be starting to flower by early June, fingers crossed. Sweet peas, snapdragons, cool crops, the perennials and a new lavender that I am trying. It’s an annual, was grown in a British flower grower’s garden so what the heck. Just a packet of seeds and my time really.

Instead of showing you photos of what’s to come, everything is too tiny, I will leave you with two pics of last week’s bouquets.

Until next week, may you dream tulips and the floral possibilities. Allie

April, a whole new month.

You wouldn’t know it was April these first few days. April fool’s day was living up to its name. A morning of freezing rain and just drismal yuck, only in the afternoon to be fully sunny and the temperatures near sixty. Is this a sign of the things to come? Resiliency must be part of the plan.

The snow is melting and with the rain yesterday I am actually seeing action. The Narcissus are easier to spot, the crocus are blooming in the shrub border, the bluebirds are checking out the nesting boxes and the gardener, holy moly, a whole lots of balls are in the air.

Let’s start with tulips. You know that the tulips were planted mid October, then they sat in the cooler until mid January when I started to haul out four crates a week. Well, tada! The dirty room is now officially empty of crates, and believe me, this is a very weird feeling. Even the dogs are thinking something is wrong here. No tulips to tiptoe around. Didn’t Tiny Tim do a song about tiptoeing around the tulips or was that someone else? Well, no more tiptoeing in the dirty room around the tulips till next year.

The last going out the door.

Going, last four, going empty, gone last one out the door!

What this all means is this Friday will be the last of the forced tulips! There will be an unfortunate lull for a week or two, but then the farm will be gang busters with tulips again. Hopefully Shelly’s experiment/project will solve this gap problem next year, but I am waiting to see.

Meanwhile, the high tunnel is completely planted, the second crop of stock went in on Wednesday along with the Icelandic poppies. The ranunculus and anemones are looking good, as is everything else planted. As soon as the snow finishes melting in the garden, and the soil has a chance to breath, the first batch of sweet peas will be planted out along with all of the perennials and rest of the cool flowers that all have been patiently waiting in the greenhouse. They are saying “Plant me please!!!”

The first BIG sowing of the summer annuals starts this week. The now empty tulip space in the dirty room will soon be filled with all the dahlia tubers that have been keeping company with the tulips in the cooler and are now feeling lonely so they will get hauled up to start sprouting, then dividing, then planting out at the end of May. Is that a run-on sentence? I feel as though I am a run-on crazy flower grower.

I will let you catch your breath, and I will leave you with this photo of the tulips that went out to grace your homes last week.

Flowers off to market.

It is going to be a cold one tonight they say, so I am off to “put the pajamas on the babies” In other words give them some added protection. So I am handing you off to Steve.

Until next week, Allie

Week 13 in the Growing Year.

Here we are at week 13. We are past the spring equinox and my how things have changed in just a week. It seems as though the plants are really starting to put on some growth. I know that you probably aren’t seeing the difference, but when you look at these photos, you can actually see green things now. Yes! Those little green specks in a post a few weeks back that you needed to see with a magnifying glass or have a really good imagination can easily see seen with the naked eye. Progress I say!

See. No magnifying glasses necessary.

The ranunculus in the greenhouse are three times this size! Estimated bloom date? For the greenhouse ones, Early May? High tunnel ones? GOK.

Another exciting thing happening is Shelly’s experiment. Shelly, who doesn’t have much sun at her house, asked if I could grow her a crate of tulips that she could put in the yard, almost in full bloom to give her joy, and impress all her friends with her gardening prowess. It was a last minute ask, but I planted up a crate of the last 3 or 4 bulbs that would have messed up my rows. Well, today Steve and I hauled it into the greenhouse….and Shelly, you might have solved my scheduling problem. We will see, I am taking notes, and when the start to show color you can have the crate to put in your garden.

Look at the growth, and being in the greenhouse….Think about the possibilities…

If Shelly’s experiment works, fingers crossed, It just might bridge the little gap between the forced tulips and the in-ground tulips. We will all just have to wait and see.

Like a mad woman, or maybe just slightly crazy, I have been making a list of plants that I need to get this year to round out my garden for available cuts to put in my bouquets and offerings. I am trying to be practical, but ya know…. not always possible, but, that being said, I really like what I have ordered. Hope I have space for everything. The month of May will be very telling here at Lottarock.

Where there is no snow, the daffodils and narcissus are emerging, it sill still be a while before they will be on the offering list, but but when they come…They are always so beautiful, cherry and fragrant. A win on all sides. Can hardly wait.

Meanwhile, seeding continues. The Icelandic poppies will get planted out this week along with the second batch of stock. Everything else I have seeded is waiting for the snow to melt so I can get the beds prepped and planted. My goal for being able to be in the main garden? April 15th. These things can’t be rushed I know but I am slightly running out of space….

So I will leave you with a photo of some of the tulip offerings that will be available on Friday. What will I choose? Hmmm. Will you will just have to wait and see.

From top left. Gabriella, Negrita, Mary Jo, Orange Princess and Finola.

Until next week, your flower girl. Allie

Tomorrow, The first Day of a Long Awaited Spring

Spring is always longingly waited for, but after this week of 38″ of snow, I am so waiting for tomorrow’s arrival. It will be warm? and spring ushers in at 5 something tomorrow night. Yeah!

I know that last week I said I would not have a post because I will be in tulip land. Well, the storm took care of that. We got slammed, and have only just finished digging out what was most necessary. All the tulips, ranunculus, anemone and cool flowers came through fine. Not to be said about our chicken run. As Steve says, this will be the year of re-building. And once the snow melts, that will be first on the list.

But enough of my woes. Let’s talk flowers. The sweet peas have geminated, another sign of spring. I tried an experiment this year and I didn’t soak the seeds which I have been doing for years, but fellow flower people said it wasn’t necessary, so what the heck. Well. Success. So batch one is germinated, and batch two will be sown maybe this week. The next batch of cool flowers is ready to be planted into the high tunnel to keep the others company. As usual, space is rapidly filling up.

The scented geranium cuttings are now off the heat and hopefully adjusting to the temperatures I keep the dirty room at because of the tulips.

Speaking of tulips, I hope you aren’t getting tired of them. My bulb rep might be stopping by on Wednesday. This will be interesting. I am probably the smallest tulip grower he will see in his career, but what I might lack in volume, I make up for in enthusiasm, wouldn’t you agree? In my sleepless moments early this morning…I am thinking how I can bridge the possible gap in tulip production. I think I have it figured out….now we just have to see if it works. Keep your fingers crossed. And, the last two very lonely crates in the cooler will be pulled tomorrow. That means that I have now hauled 34 crates into the dirty room. Yay arm and back muscles.

34 of these in 10 weeks, one way!

But seriously, looking at this week’s odd leftovers in the kitchen, aren’t they worth it! i sure think so.

Carnival de Rio, Finola, Delta Storm and Tropical Sunset

I feel so lucky to have flowers almost every day of the year in my life, and that I have grown them all at Lottarock Farm, and I think all of you for going on this adventure with me.

Until next week. Happy Spring. Allie

Oh, Mother Nature, how could you?

All I can say is that I am very glad I have lots of little green things and tulips growing happily because it will be awhile before the snow melts. More snow! Seriously. Just when I think that spring is on our doorstep, good Ole’ Mother Nature decides that another 18″ of heavy wet snow is just what we need. NOT!

Despite the looming snow, things really are happening here at the farm. The tulips are growing very nicely and thank you to you all for enjoying them.

An armful of color ready to go out

The ranunculus in the greenhouse are growing nicely, and the second batch have finally been planted in the high tunnel.

Ranunculus in Greenhouse

Along with the second batch of ranunculus that have been planted, the anemone have also been planted out and the first batch of seedling in the high tunnel have joined them. Half the tunnel is full and I still have more to go in, oh dear…space. My constant issue.

The first seedling planted.

The white sheets on the side are the remay, or what I refer to as the plant’s pajamas that I cover the hoops with every evening to keep the seedlings warm, or really warmer.

Unknown, but beautiful I think.

As you can see, things are a happening here at the farm. My days go like this. Uncover the plants, water seedlings and tulips in dirty room. Check water in greenhouse and tunnel and, if necessary, water. Seed and or transplant, move what needs to get moved. Check temperature and if necessary vent…turn on fans….then around 4:00 reverse the process. Turn off fans, close doors, cover plants and repeat this process daily. I certainly getting my steps in.

As I was closing up this afternoon I was stunned. Look at this.

Some in ground tulips are poking through. Until tomorrow anyway. Then gone again until the snow melts.

I will finish this up here. I have to go out and tuck the plants in for the night. There will be no blog next week. We will be in Tulip land and I am sure I will come home with flower stories to regale you with. I leave you with last Thursday’s #windowsillthursday photo.

Until next time. Allie