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  1. K

    Tampa Locals Swear By These Flower Delivery Wizards

    Tampa’s flower scene isn’t just about grabbing whatever’s wilting at the grocery store checkout. The city’s packed with family-run shops... The post Tampa Locals Swear By These Flower Delivery Wizards appeared first on Petal Republic.
  2. K

    High Quality Photos for Thrips Identification: Rating Phone Attachments.

    This is a guest post by Avery Johnson (former OMAFA summer student and current M.Sc. student studying Thrips parvispinus) and S. Jandricic. Having difficulty identifying thrips on sticky cards and need clear photos to send to your consultant or extension agent? Don’t want to invest in a...
  3. K

    Managing Million Bells: 2025 Updates

    It’s that time of year again, when Million Bells (Calibrachoa) are being started in the greenhouse. This post will discuss common insect and disease pests, such as aphids, thrips and black root rot and viruses. Stay tuned for an upcoming post about production tips and tricks for this popular...
  4. K

    In Case You Missed It: “Scouting your Ornamental Crops like a Pro” Webinar is Now Up!

    If scouting has been a challenge for you or your employees in the past, you’re a new IPM scout, or you feel like you could use a refresher, then this webinar is for you! This recorded webinar is applicable to garden retail centres as well as ornamental and some nursery crop producers. I cover...
  5. K

    Which Microscope Should you Buy for Your Greenhouse?

    With new invasive species popping up, the need for growers to more closely inspect pests and damage is at an all time high. This has led to interest in on-farm pest identification. When it comes to thrips identification, specifically, investing in a microscope is a necessary evil. But a decent...
  6. K

    Poinsettia Pest Management Pointers 2023: Receipt Through Potting Up.

    Poinsettias are here! In the next few posts we’ll be breaking down production into into 4 key growing periods: Receipt/Propagation, Early Production, Late Production, and Finishing. This post on propagation will cover things you can do now to treat pests and diseases in your cuttings to prevent...
  7. K

    Thrips Identification Workshop for Growers: Coming to an Ontario Town Near YOU!

    It’s no secret that recent outbreaks of thrips species other than western flower thrips (WFT) have made producing greenhouse crops in Ontario harder than usual. This includes species such as onion thrips, Thrips parvispinus, and chrysanthemum thrips. As control measures are different depending...
  8. K

    Potted Chrysanthemums 2024: Dips, Thrips and Threats

    Every year at this time, growers start to think about strategies to minimizing western flower thrips on their chrysanthemum crops. This year, Thrips parvispinus is causing extra concern, given that chrysanthemum is one of its reported hosts. Although there have been no reports yet of...
  9. K

    “How-to” Video of the Week: Plant Washes and Other Tools to Make Detecting Parvispinus Easier

    OMAFA Summer Student Avery Johnson demonstrating plant washes on-farm. In this week’s “how-to” video, we’ll explore using plant washes on-farm. Plant washes are a simple but effective method to detect low levels of critical pests, such as Thrips parvispinus. Once you’ve washed out your pests...
  10. K

    Points for Points! Production Pointers for 2024 Poinsettias

    This post was contributed to by Abigail Wiesner, Drs. Sarah Jandricic, and Chevonne Dayboll. Christmas in July? Not quite, but poinsettias are making their way into greenhouses across Ontario, and they always arrive at the hottest time of the year. Nutritional issues, environmental stress...
  11. K

    Deficiencies Got You Down?

    This post was contributed to by Abigail Wiesner and Chevonne Dayboll. As we move through production for fall and winter crops a refresher for nutrient deficiencies feels appropriate. No matter where you are in a cropping cycle, nutrition problems can be tricky to figure out. The good thing is...
  12. K

    Floral Spectacle in Seattle, inspired by The Flower House (Episode 230)

    “We can imagine it and we can do it,” Diane Szukovathy, Jello Mold Farm & Seattle Wholesale Growers Market Last week I told you about a series of Flower House activities taking place in Seattle with creator Lisa Waud. As I noted, Lisa has been on a West Coast tour which began on January 19th […]...
  13. K

    Got Rocks? Here’s a savvy design solution for all those nuggets you’re digging up

    If your garden is like ours, well, rocks are in abundance. Our six-month-old garden occupies the 20-foot-by-60-foot backyard of a suburban home completed just months ago, right before we moved in on February 11th. By the time we started working on the garden, no surprise! We realized what...
  14. K

    Revisiting our Stylish Sheds

    Published in 2008, Stylish Sheds and Elegant Hideaways is more relevant than ever! In 2008, after a year of scouting the country for “stylish sheds” with my wonderful collaborator, Seattle photographer Bill Wright, and after months of interviewing shed owners, designers and builders, then...
  15. K

    Episode 466: Black Sanctuary Gardens with Leslie Bennett of Oakland-based Pine House Edible Gardens

    Today’s special guest returns to the Slow Flowers Podcast after her 2017 appearance. Leslie Bennett is an award-winning garden creator whose Pine House Edible Gardens designs and installs beautiful, productive edible landscapes that provide bountiful harvests of organic fruits, vegetables...
  16. K

    Episode 500: Celebrating Episode 500 and the publication of Where We Bloom, with BLOOM Imprint’s Robin Avni and designer Cynthia Zamaria of Toronto’s

    Welcome to a very special episode of the Slow Flowers Podcast — Episode 500 — in our weekly podcast series about Slow Flowers and the people who grow and design with them. Since we launched this special program in July 2013, I have regularly featured the voices of influencers, stylemakers...
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    Episode 509: From Cutting Gardens to Flowers for the Home, a Conversation with the Horticulture Team at Filoli Historic House & Garden, Jim Salyards,

    Over the past year, you’ve heard from many of the panelists and personalities scheduled to present at the upcoming Slow Flowers Summit, scheduled for June 28-30, which is right around the corner. And today, I’m bringing you straight to our Summit destination, Filoli Historic House & Garden based...
  18. K

    Episode 535: Where She Blooms – Lori Poliski of Flori LLC designs a 100% compostable holiday wreath from her charming studio

    Thank you so much for joining us today! It’s the first week of December and time to put away all the pumpkin and harvest decor aside and think about the floral palette for our winter holidays. I’m so happy to introduce you to Lori Poliski of Flori LLC, a Slow Flowers member whose design studio...
  19. K

    Episode 562: Susan McLeary shares her large-scale, foam-free, floral design installation techniques at the 2021 Slow Flowers Summit (encore presentati

    We are closing in on the 2022 Slow Flowers Summit, taking place June 26-28th in Westchester County New York – at two venues, the Red Barn at Maple Grove Farm in Bedford and at Stone Barns Center for Food & Agriculture in Pocantico Hills. You’ve met almost all of our speakers here on the Slow […]...
  20. K

    Episode 659: Designer Leslie Bennett, co-author of Garden Wonderland and founder of Pine House Edible Gardens and Black Sanctuary Gardens

    Leslie Bennett believes that gardens are for all. In Garden Wonderland, this celebrated landscape designer treats us to an accessible garden-making approach to create our own plant-based spaces, spaces that provide sustenance, beauty, and wonder. Her new book will inspire your own garden journey...
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