Friday, 30 January 2009

My Flower of the Month February



Well February is here and my flower for the Month is Tulips.


"Tulips" I here you say Not Roses.


Yes that right Red Tulips are my True flower of St Valentine's Day.




Tulips got their name from the Turkish for turban, after its rounded flower head form.


Botanical name: Tulipa.


Colours: Everything except blue and true black. Companies say they have bred ture blue and black but when you look at them they are not really true.


Availability: November to May is the main season but now available all year in limited colours and supplies.


Origin: Middle East, grown in extensively in Holland and the UK. (tulips from Amsterdam.)


Care Tips: Tulips continue to grow in water and will curve towards the light. Make allowances for this when putting them in a vase or wrap the stems tightly in newspaper and stand them in water directly beneath a light for a few hours. Tulips have a vase life of just over a week, and buy flowers in bud but with colour showing.


Tulips are the third-biggest selling flower in Holland and are also very popular in the UK where many are also grown.


In the Victorian language of flowers red tulips are a declaration of love, making them ideal gifts for Valentine's Day.


History fact from the Flower and Plant association: In the middle ages tulipmania saw bulbs change hands for the equivalent of £4million pounds a bulb!
Just think how much this field would have cost.

Monday, 26 January 2009

My Flower of the Month

Name. Paphiopedilum Orchid , the Slipper Orchid.

Commonly called Lady's Slipper

Origin: Originally from Thailand, Burma and Vietnam, many varieties are now bred mainly in USA and UK. These orchids are terrestrial plants (growing on the floor).
Colour: White, yellow, green, brown,maroon and tan and often spotted or striped.
One or two flowers per stem (sometimes 3 to 4), shaped like slippers with the laces trailing to the sides, available all year round.

Pronounced PAFF-ee-oh PED-e-lum 'Paphos slipper'. Paphos in Cyprus has a temple to Aphrodite, the epitome of woman, and a goddess worshipped by the Greeks. Slipper refers to the shape of the lower petal of the flower.

Over 19,000 hybrid forms of Paphiopedilum have been registered.

Cut Flower Care Tips: They will last for well over a month, but because tthey have hairy stems they should not be placed in deep water.
They like cool air and regular misting, and are sensitive to ethylene gas so keep them away from fruit, vegetables and dying flowers.

The New Shop Front

The New Shop front,sign writing and customer ramp access now in place.

The ramp access has been brilliant to allow our physically challenged clients easy entry into the shop.

The Shop signage is all new with the window graphics adding to the colourful display. The sign writing was expertly installed by designer Matt at Premier Signs, Redruth.

The next update that's happening is going to electronic opening and closing doors, this will give our clients an even more enjoyable shopping at Flowertime and http://www.wesendflowers.co.uk/.
Photo credit Sarah Chapman


Saturday, 24 January 2009

My Plant of the Month


Phalaenopsis - The Moth Orchid.








Name - Comes from Greek phalaina meaning a moth and opsis meaning resemblance. It is pronounced fal-a-nop-sis.
Description - Arching flower stalks bear lovely, flat, multiple flower heads which resemble moths or butterflies.
Country of Orgin - South East Asia
Family - Orchid family, with 50+ species belonging to the genus Phalaenopsis
Care Tips - Enjoy a light spot, but do not place in bright direct sunlight. Regular, moderate watering ideally using boiled and cooled water. Provide high humidity, mist often but not on the flower heads. Feed with Orchid fertiliser every other watering. Cut back stems after flowers fade to just below node which produced the first flower. Given the right conditions phalaenopsis can flower for months on end.
Intresting fact about the plant - Brilliant plant for the office a home Phalaenopsis are very effective in removing xylene (chemical emissions from adhesives, computer VDU screens, paints, stains etc) from the atmosphere.




Giving it a Go!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!














Ladies from the Tangent Club in West Cornwall have fun, and try out the art of making Corsages.
Mark went along and gave a talk and demonstration on how to make a corsage for a wedding or dinner dance.


The ladies had a selection of flowers and foliages to use, including cymbidium orchids, china grass, wax flowers and more...........





All the ladies present thought making a corsage was easy but once Mark started to wire all the floral bits up and tape the stems they then changed their minds.




The photos shows the ladies having ago, the wine was flowing to help calm their frustations.



Comments included: " wow never knew that amount of work went into something so small." " how do you do that again!!!!!!!" " Thanks Mark for being a very understanding wish I had your patience"








Friday, 23 January 2009

WeSendFlowers-Local National & International


WeSendFlowers-Local National & International

Click the above link to visit the new website.
Dutch keep seized orchids

Orchids on route for last year’s Chelsea Flower Show 2008 that were confiscated by Dutch customs are now being housed permanently in a Dutch botanical garden.
Dutch judges have ruled that the super rare flowers, which were seized in May 08 because the proper importation paperwork had not been filed, be kept at a botanical garden.

Henk Vonk from the National Service for Implementation of Regulations of Confiscated Goods in Holland said his department had received a decision from the Public Prosecutor of Justice to donate the eight seized orchids to a botanical garden.“They are in good condition and one is flowering,” he said.

The Ghost Orchids and Wild Banana Orchids were seized by Dutch customs officials in mid–May because of tight European regulations restricting the trade and movement of rare and endangered species of plants.
While an export licence from the Cayman authorities had been secured, the plants did not have an import licence – a requirement that had been introduced just weeks beforehand.

The news that the flowers were surviving, and even flourishing, was met with joy by Kirkland Nixon, president of Cayman’s Orchid Society.“At least they’re in safe hands. I don’t think they will exploit them or try to commercialise them,” he said.

The eight orchids are estimated to be worth a total of $80,000.

He was also pleased to hear that one of the plants was flowering, and wished the Dutch luck in trying to propagate the seeds of the Ghost Orchids, something the Orchid Society here has been unable to do.
“We’ve been trying to propagate these endangered orchids from seeds for years… We’ve gotten them to bloom and to pollinate, but for some reason, this plant is sterile.
I don’t know why.“Maybe the Dutch will have more luck than we did,” Mr. Nixon said.

The orchids were collected in February 2006 from land off Newport Avenue, which was cleared for low–cost housing, and had been growing at the Queen Elizabeth II Botanic Park for a few years before beginning their interrupted journey to the Chelsea Flower Show in England last year.

It would have been the first time the British public would have had a chance to view the Ghost Orchids on English soil.
The Botanic Park had not intended to bring the orchids back to Cayman following the flower show. It had planned to donate the orchids to Kew Gardens, and auction them to raise money for the Blue Iguana Recovery Fund to a winner who could visit the flowers there.
Instead, when the flowers got stuck in Holland, the sponsorship of two orchids growing in the park in Cayman were auctioned, with the winner receiving a holiday to the Cayman Islands to visit the Botanic Park and see their sponsored orchids.

There is little likelihood of a repeat of last year’s debacle with the plants, according to the Botanic Park’s general manager, Andrew Guthrie, as no plants are being sent from Cayman to the 2009 Chelsea Flower Show.
“This year the exhibit is completely different. We’re not shipping plants or anything else from Cayman. Everything is being sourced in England or Europe.

“Shipping plants from Cayman to Europe or from Miami to Europe is a monumental nightmare and we don’t want to do that again,” Mr. Guthrie said.

As well as losing the rare orchids to Dutch Customs, the Cayman exhibit last year ran into further trouble when British Airways lost a catboat it had shipped from Cayman three times. The boat was eventually located just in time for the show.

Queen Elizabeth II Botanic Park is home to 10 of the 26 orchid species recorded in the Cayman Islands, and three of these are found nowhere else on earth.

Source: caycompass.com

Thursday, 22 January 2009

Quick Flower Tip of the Month.


Floral Foam

Do you Know how to prepare it correctly?

If not this is how..................


1.You should first fill a bucket with clean fresh water and added cut flowers food (keeps bacteria at bay and help the flowers complete their life cycle.


2. Place your piece of floral foam onto the surface of the water, and allow the foam to take up water at its own pace. The foam will get darker once its soaked.


DO NOT AT ANY TIME PUSH THE FOAM UNDER THE WATER SURFACE.This will only cause an air lock inside the piece of foam and thus result in flowers not living out their full life.


(Top Tip: for arranging flowers in floral foam,use a knife it will be easier and better for the flowers when placing them into the floral foam)


3. Once you have made your arrangement please remember to keep it topped up with water daily.


4. Never reuse a piece of floral foam it will contain lots of holes, dry areas, will not soak up water fully again, and will by then be a breeding ground for bacteria and this will affect the life of your new flowers.


Hope this helps you make better floral arrangements.


Happy flower arranging


Mark