Slow Flowers Podcast

Debra Prinzing
Slow Flowers Podcast

The Slow Flowers Podcast is the award-winning, long-running show known as the "Voice of the Slow Flowers Movement." Airing weekly for more than 9 years, we focus on the business of flower farming and floral design through the Slow Flowers sustainability ethos. Listen to a new episode each Wednesday, available for free download here at slowflowerspodcast.com or on iTunes, Spotify, and other podcast platforms.

  1. VOR 3 STD.

    Episode 696: Our 2024 Year in Review for Slow Flowers Society with Debra Prinzing

    https://youtu.be/KzWJQWxQIkE?si=odYVvhdRI_2Z5hn7 For the past decade, I have kept an important annual ritual. Before I turn the calendar page to the New Year, I take time at the end of December to reflect back on the one that’s coming to a close. This exercise has become our recurring Slow Flowers Society "Year in Review," a habit that takes stock of the prior 12 months and considers how our many programs and efforts have supported the Slow Flowers Mission. You’re invited to join me as we review Slow Flowers Society in 2024 and discuss how it reflects our true priorities, passion, and purpose! Twenty-twenty-five arrives in just a few days, so before we say good-bye to 2024, I want to reflect on this past year’s highlights. It’s an exercise that has become an important annual tradition and I have to say that it is always rewarding for me to pause and reflect on the achievements of the Slow Flowers Society and larger impact of the Slow Flowers Movement. I believe our Year-in-Review can always be a predictor for the year to come. As Slow Flowers Society interacts with members, media, sponsors, and others in the floral industry, we gain important understanding and insights. For the Slow Flowers Team and me, we are so proud of what we achieved during 2024. We pay special attention to the values and benefits we deliver to you, our community, especially to our members who invest their resources in joining, participating, and engaging in programs both virtual and in-person. You and your support are the reason why we continue to achieve our core goal -- to inspire the floral industry and its consumers to embrace local, seasonal, and sustainable flowers. Whether it's for personal or professional reasons, as this year comes to a close, I encourage you to take time to write your own Year-In-Review. I’ve learned that when we do so, a narrative emerges, one that can guide future decisions and priorities. Slow Flowers Year in Review for 2024Download Join us at the 2025 Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit Our commitment to featuring a diversity of subject matter experts and experienced voices continues in 2025. The first WORLDWIDE Slow Flowers Summit is scheduled for January 9-11, 2025. This virtual conference takes place entirely online over three days – making it accessible and affordable for attendees everywhere. The program format includes 15 floral education sessions, as well as bonus content from special guest presenters. Click to read more about the Program and Schedule Click to read about our Speakers Buy Your Ticket NOW! As you may know, the Slow Flowers Movement has been emulated around the world – and emerging groups are eager for access to the same innovation, information, and inclusive approaches enjoyed by our members, but specialized for their own markets. The Slow Flowers Worldwide Summit is designed to provide inspiration for flower farmers, floral designers, and flower lovers, wherever they are based. Ticket sales continue at slowflowerssummit.com – through January 8th. General admission is $279 US and Slow Flowers members receive $50 off for $229 . I hope to see you there! 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.

    25 Min.
  2. 18. DEZ.

    Episode 695 – New Cut Flower Seeds for 2025 + Flower Breeding News with Hillary Alger, Joy Longfellow, and Lindsay Wyatt of Johnny’s Selected Seeds

    https://youtu.be/9bau3g6_h6A?si=a70BbD2OFYpQmrrW Back by popular demand, we're hosting Johnny's Seeds' floral experts, Joy Longfellow and Hillary Alger, who will introduce some of Johnny's Selected Seeds' 40-plus new flower seed varieties for 2025! Hillary and Joy take us behind the scenes to learn more about the dazzling selections of floral varieties and mixes for 2025 – from the subtle to the vibrant, including four NEW introductions -- straight from Johnny's Exclusive Breeding Program. And learn from our bonus guest, Johnny's Senior Plant Breeder Lindsay Wyatt, who discusses what it takes to select and breed gorgeous new petal palettes and bring them to market! New Zinnia varieties from Johnny's Seeds Celosia 'Shimmer' It's that time of year again, when the seed catalogs arrive and as the winter solstice takes place in a few days, we turn our dreams to our 2025 cutting gardens and flower farms. Today's show is a follow up to Slow Flowers Podcast Episode 640 from December of 2023, about one year ago, when Hillary Alger and Joy Longfellow unveiled Johnny's Selected Seeds' new flower seed varieties for 2024. The replay video of that show been viewed more than 5,000 times on YouTube – it was our most popular episode of 2024. https://youtu.be/FEbEZgWQliE But I'm delighted to report that there's even more exciting flower seed news for 2025, and that's the topic of today's show, with return guests Hillary and Joy. Hillary has more than 13 years of experience on Johnny’s Seeds’ research team, currently serving as the Product Manager for flowers and herbs, and Joy is the Flower Team Technician at Johnny’s, managing every aspect of Johnny’s flower trialing program. As a bonus, Lindsay Wyatt, their collaborator in new flower seed breeding, joins in the presentation to explain all about the "recurrent selection" method of breeding. https://youtu.be/RLqedWQmvE4?si=a7cBz9ATznB3emJP This episode covers some gorgeous and vigorous new introductions that the flower team has trialed, evaluated, and curated for 2025 -- including agrostemma, China aster, snapdragon, strawflower, celosia, pansy and viola, and lisianthus. But what's more exciting than that are the four new Johnny's introductions from the breeding program that began in 2016. You'll get to meet three lovely new zinnia introductions -- Aurora, Agave, and Ballerina -- and one beautiful new celosia mix called Shimmer. https://youtu.be/JD2_YhPcLT8?si=nGa-iB5llCZCMAMu Let's jump right in and welcome the talented floral team from Johnny's. Learn why their favorite standouts are worth considering! More Resources:Follow Johnny's Seeds on Instagramhttps://www.instagram.com/johnnys_seeds/ Hillary Algerhttps://www.instagram.com/hillaryalger/ Joy Longfellowhttps://www.instagram.com/joyatjohnnys/ Lindsay Wyatthttps://www.instagram.com/lindsay564/ Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit 2025 And we’re just three weeks away from the Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit, so now is the time to grab your ticket! The SLOW FLOWERS WORLDWIDE SUMMIT takes place online – January 9-11, 2025 – and you will enjoy 15 hours of amazing floral education from Slow Flowers experts. Check out the details at slowflowerssummit.com. Slow Flowers members receive $50 off their registration! Reserve Your Seat at the Slow Flowers Summit Thank you to our Sponsors

    1 Std. 7 Min.
  3. 11. DEZ.

    Episode 694 – A Conversation with Mary Jo Hoffman on her new book STILL: The Art of Noticing

    https://youtu.be/5IsESlnFzIY?si=ySgAiO3LNUIpvvTd Every day for more than a decade, Mary Jo Hoffman has made a photograph of found nature – no subject too small or too ordinary. For Mary Jo, a former aeronautical engineer, this daily ritual cracked open profound revelations about the connectedness of all things, the importance of place, and her own life. She joined me to talk about her daily practice that led to more than 4,000 consecutive days of images filled with surprise, play, wonder, and joy as she paid attention to the natural world. We discuss STILL, The Art of Noticing, Mary Jo’s stunning new book -- a fabulous holiday gift for yourself or someone you love. Today, we have a very special episode to share with our creative community as we welcome Mary Jo Hoffman, a botanical photographer, writer, and artist, whose eyes and camera capture intimate portraits of the flora and fauna in her world. Every day since January 1, 2012, for 12-and-a-half years, Mary Jo made a photograph of found nature, capturing it in an alluring minimalist style. Mary Jo Hoffman Her daily ritual cracked open profound revelations about the importance of place, the passing of time, the connectedness of all things, and the trajectory of her own life. Here’s a bit more about Mary Jo Hoffman: Mary Jo Hoffman is an artist-photographer renowned for her unique and personal engagement with the natural world. Best known for her project, "STILL” -- where every day (every single day) for over a decade, she made a photograph of found nature – no subject too small or too ordinary. Inside pages from STILL by Mary Jo Hoffman Her book, STILL: The Art of Noticing, features 275 of the most stunning photographs the author-artist has accumulated over thousands of consecutive days of daily shooting accompanied by perceptive, deeply felt, and often humorous essays illuminating the insights gained through this daily creative practice. Mary Jo lives in Shoreview, Minnesota, on Turtle Lake, with her husband, Steve, a food writer and author, and her indulged puggle, Jack, who accompanies her on her daily foraging walks to find new subjects. Pink tulips opening I received a review copy of STILL when it was published earlier this year in May, and I wanted to save it for a special episode. We usually feature Slow Flowers members as our guests, so the exception I make is to host artists and creatives whose work moves me personally. Now that we’ve arrived at the gifting season, sharing my conversation with Mary Jo will, I hope, inspire you to check out STILL. There’s still time to purchase your copy. Follow Mary Jo Hoffman on InstagramSubscribe to Mary Jo's newsletterView her Pinterest GalleriesOrder your copy of STILL Ferns from STILL I will leave you with a passage from one of her essays, which spoke to me, from page 50. I hope it resonates with your own mindful practice: “You are what you do. If you show up every day and make a little bit of art, however incomplete or unsatisfying or misguided or not how Georgia O’Keefe would have done it, you are an artist.”Mary Jo Hoffman, STILL: The Art of Noticing Thank you, Mary Jo, for helping us notice the places where we find ourselves – and to see them with new eyes. Slow Flowers (Virtual) Member Meet-Up on December 13th Aurora Zinnia from Johnny's Selected Seeds In our news of the week, you’re invited to attend our December Slow Flowers Meet-Up, coming up Friday, Dec.

    56 Min.
  4. 4. DEZ.

    Episode 693 – The Wonderful World of Willows with Alana Karam of Willamette Willows

    https://youtu.be/14Tb-BfiW6U?si=-oTJseUbcNEP22uU It’s Willow Week here at the Slow Flowers Podcast and Alana Karam of Willamette Willows is my guest. Learn about the three distinct categories of willow plants and their markets – including cultivars suitable for basketry and woven garden structures, as well as the many varieties of curly willow and pussy willow loved by floral designers. Alana breaks it all down and I for one am wondering why more flower farmers aren’t getting into the willow market!? You’ll learn all about the potential offered by Salix, this unique and beautiful genus. Alana Karam (left) and leafy willow plants (right) Earlier this year, Alana Karam and I started corresponding about her specialty micro farm – Willamette Willows. Based outside Eugene, Oregon, Alana shared with me that willow is a great investment for flower farmers because it provides florists with a local option in late fall and winter, when other botanicals can be scarce, and when so many florists are tempted to order non-local options. As Alana mentioned, “curly willows provide reds, oranges, and yellows. And pussy willow in early spring is so sentimental for so many people…” Willamette Willows in Oregon's beautiful Willamette Valley After I visited Willamette Willows in October, I was even more intrigued. I learned that willow plants are inexpensive to establish and easy to grow. Alana explained that there’s some misinformation out there that makes growing willow so much harder than it needs to be. The blue sky at Willamette Willows Today, we’re diving into the world of willows with a two-part episode. It begins with an extensive conversation that I recently recorded with Alana, and if you’d really like to see what we’re talking about, you can watch the second portion, a Willow Tour that Alana and her husband Michael recorded in their growing area. Woven Willow Here’s a bit more about Willamette Willows: Willamette Willows is a small family farm located in the southernmost tip of the Willamette Valley in Oregon. The farm, nestled in the convergence of the foothills, and containing an amazing combination of pasture, orchard, meadow, evergreen forest, wetlands, and ash grove, has been home to many animals, including horses, rescue donkeys, goats, pigs, cows, chickens, ducks, rabbits, and several rescue pups. In this dreamlike setting, Alana and Michael, (along with their faithful farm dogs, Figg, Maggie, and Thor), are privileged to research, plant, grow, harvest, sort, and ship willow to other growers. Since discovering that both they and the property were perfectly suited to growing willow, Alana and Michael have devoted themselves to learning everything possible about the genus Salix, choosing the best varieties for the myriad uses of willow, and planting thousands and thousands of cuttings. No pesticides or commercial fertilizers are used, and most of their work is done by hand. Willow, with its prehistoric roots, has played incredibly diverse and important roles in human history and culture, but like many natural resources, it has been somewhat neglected in the new age of plastics and modern conveniences. Alana and Michael are pursuing a mission to be ambassadors for this amazing plant, and to make it, and its uses, familiar and accessible to everyone who is interested in things renewable, sustainable, and beautiful. Winter at Willamette Willows Find and follow Willamette Willows on Instagram and Facebook SLOW FLOWERS WORLDWIDE SUMMIT 2025

    51 Min.
  5. 27. NOV.

    Episode 692 – The Art and Business of Pressed Flowers with Ottawa-based Kate Punnett of The August Press

    https://youtu.be/mu0JH_Pj4XE?si=Z3BS5eQRfw56DE7N Wondering what's NEXT in your portfolio of floral products and services? Today’s topic – the art and business of flower pressing -- promises to inspire you. I’m thrilled to share our recent November Slow Flowers Meet-Up with Kate Punnett, who’s based in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. She is a pressed flower artist dedicated to sustainability and she crafts custom pressed floral art, greeting cards and fine art with botanicals she grows and sources from fellow farmers. Her studio, The August Press, also creates professional-grade flower presses inspired by the timeless art of pressing flowers – listen and watch to learn more about her techniques and how you can get started pressing flowers in your own studio. Kate Punnett, The Pressed Florist A few weeks ago, we held November’s Slow Flowers Member Meet-Up, a virtual Zoom gathering that showcases experts among our community who generously share their talents and knowledge with fellow Slow Flowers Members. Our session featured Ottawa-based floral artist Kate Punnett, owner of The August Press. As a longtime specialty cut flower grower who has spent the past several years perfecting her personal flower pressing technique, Kate now sells original and digitized pressed flower artwork, takes commissions, sells her custom-designed presses, and teaches others about the wonders and joys of pressing the flower we love. Kate Punnett of The August Press It felt like a great time of year – especially for those of us who want to slow down and explore a new facet of our lives in flowers -- and I invited Kate to lead this session. Flower pressing is an age-old practice. Think about placing a violet in the pages of a thick dictionary – and months later discovering its perfect, papery form! Kate is pushing the methods and elevating the art form far beyond dictionary pressing. This is definitely one of our Podcast episodes that calls for you to click over to our show notes at slowflowerspodcast.com to find the video link – in which you’ll watch Kate demonstrate some of the techniques she employs. It is especially cool to see how Kate breaks down thick buds and blooms like roses and sunflowers so they can press flat, and to learn how she utilizes a bloom or stem’s most natural angles, much as you might observe them growing in the garden. SO much to consider and I’m delighted to share our conversation with you today! Pressed Floral Art by Kate Punnett You will also see more photography of Kate’s pressed florals and products, including her new version of the Handbook for the Pressed Floral Artist, a digital guide that you can order online for a modest investment. Follow The August Press on Instagram Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit 2025 In more news, if you’re listening to this episode when it drops on Wednesday, November 27th, it’s time to take advantage of our Black Friday through Cyber Monday ticket promotion for the upcoming Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit, taking place online in the New Year – January 9-11th. That’s right, starting this Friday, November 29th through Monday, December 2nd, we are rolling back the Summit ticket prices to our $50 off introductory Early-Bird rate. And remember, Slow Flowers members always receive an additional $50 off their ticket purchase as a member benefit. Check out the link in our show notes, or click on the bio in our IG account -- @slowflowerssociety, or visit slowflowerssummit.com. Enjoy fifteen hours of online education from some of the top floral experts in the Slow Flowers community and I hope to see you there!

    1 Std. 3 Min.
  6. 26. NOV.

    Episode 692 Bonus: Sarah Statham of Simply By Arrangement (Encore)

    Hello everyone, Debra Prinzing here from the Slow Flowers Podcast. I hope you have been following along for the past few months as we have been posting Instagram live conversations with our amazing Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit speakers. Sarah Statham of Simply by Arrangement Today, I have a fun conversation to share and it will introduce you (or possibly re-introduce you) to Sarah Statham of Simply by Arrangement, who is based in the north of England in the Yorkshire region. Sarah will be one of our 15 inspiring presenters at the 2025 Summit, taking place January 9-11, 2025. Her presentation: Creating a Workshop Destination for Flower Lovers will share more about how Simply by Arrangement has become a must-visit venue for floral enthusiasts around the world – I can’t wait for you to attend and learn more! A cuppa with Sarah In 2015, I was so fortunate to visit this beautiful, history-rich area as Sarah’s guest. Home to the Brontë sisters, and the beautiful RHS Harlow-Carr Botanic Garden, the architecture and landscape took my breath away. Sarah’s design studio and cutting garden are the source of all the incredible, natural beauty that she shares with followers around the globe who love her @simplybyarrangement feed on Instagram. Sarah and her husband James, often called “Mister Simply” in her IG posts, were exceedingly generous hosts for my mom and me. We met many other flower farmers, including Gillian Hodgson, founder of Flowers from the Farm, who organized my entire itinerary and brought together the local flower farmers for me to meet while enjoying high tea. It was an unforgettable visit, and today I’m sharing the encore replay of my 2015 podcast interview with Sarah. This is from Episode 198 – originally posted on June 16, 2015. I know you’ll enjoy the conversation as Sarah tells me how she left a stressful legal career for a life in flowers. In it, she refers to Christie Buchanan, her original business partner in Simply by Arrangement. When she launched Simply by Arrangement, Sarah's original vision paired excellent food with seasonal flowers. Christie (aka Mrs. B.), prepared exquisite menus for workshop guests, and when I met her, I was smitten by both the woman and her handcrafted savory and sweet dishes. Now, Mrs. B. is busy with young grandbabies, so Sarah draws provisions from other cooks and chefs. Debra at Cambo Estate I reunited with Sarah in 2022 when I attended two days of floral workshops at the Cambo Estate outside Saint Andrews, Scotland. You can find the PDF of my story from the Fall 2022 issue of Slow Flowers Journal (below), to read and learn more about Simply by Arrangement: Autumn in East NeukDownload Please Join Us at the Slow Flowers WORLDWIDE Summit! This year's online Worldwide Summit is our first ever, inviting attendees to join us from across the international Slow Flowers Movement. Inspired by the great success of the previous seven live, in-person conferences, Slow Flowers Society is staging an expansive and inclusive Slow Flowers Summit for attendees across the globe! This event will take place over three days early in the New Year - perfectly timed for floral professionals and flower lovers to fill their toolboxes with skills and techniques, and to uplift their goals and ambitions for the coming season. Join Slow Flowers' doers and thinkers for three days of progressive ideas, connections and inspiration - online! - January 9-11, 2025. Registration is now open! Tickets and Details Here

    16 Min.
  7. 20. NOV.

    Episode 691 – The Case for Growing Winter Tulips with Brooke Palmer of Jenny Creek Flowers

    https://youtu.be/nybZzD1_cEw?si=_UqeABJ7nSfMrKTe In her recent Slow Flowers Journal column, “The Business of Flowers,” Brooke Palmer of Jenny Creek Flowers shared how and why she embraces winter tulip production. Our conversation today explores Brooke’s considerations through the lens of her Slow Flowers sustainability ethos while also forcing thousands of tulips into bloom during the off-season. Brooke and I discuss how she balances building a large customer base around winter-grown tulips with her desire to run a floral enterprise that’s also sustainable from a fiscal perspective – during the time of year when outside temperatures dip to the low teens. Brooke Palmer of Jenny Creek Flowers Today’s episode is super timely, as most of us are deep into our fall bulb planting. Brooke Palmer owns Jenny Creek Flowers, a boutique cut flower farm based in Trumansburg in the Finger Lake Region of upstate New York. My conversation with Brooke originated earlier this year when I received an email from her. She wrote: Brooke's winter tulips - a vivid burst of joy! “From April through October, my farm offers local, seasonal, and sustainable blooms. From January through April, it offers local and sustainable blooms as I force thousands of tulips into bloom. Does my farm remain aligned to the Slow Flowers mission?” she asked. Brooke went on to evaluate our mantra: Local, Seasonal and Sustainable – through her practices.Local?: “Hundreds of people in my community are able to get locally grown flowers during winter and early spring rather than buying imported flowers.”Sustainable?: “Because I only use LED lights and no additional heat source, my tulip program is sustainable.”Seasonal?: Here's the rub. . . There are hundreds of flower farms now doing this around the country (and likely hundreds more giving it a try this coming winter). Is there a place for tulip forcing within the Slow Flowers Society?” I was impressed that Brooke asked these questions and our subsequent correspondence and conversations led to me asking her to write a column on Winter Tulip Bulb Forcing for the Fall 2024 issue of the Slow Flowers Journal. The edition dropped last week and I would love you to read Brooke’s full essay in our “Business of Flowers”” column -- I've included the PDF below. Slow Flowers Journal FINAL 11_11 FALL 2024-24-25Download We dive even deeper into Brooke’s story in today’s episode and I know you’ll love meeting her and hearing how this former HS English teacher and lifelong gardener has transitioned to a full-time, year-round specialty cut flower grower – yes – while living in upstate New York – also known as USDA Zone 6a. When Brooke isn't growing winter tulips at Jenny Creek Flowers, she grows fields of dahlias and other summer crops. By the way, Brooke’s early email was so encouraging and I’d love to share it as my parting sentiments. She wrote: “I have so much respect for the work you have done to bring attention to local flowers. I've wrestled through the implications of forcing tulips into bloom and am comfortably situated in a place where it makes perfect sense from a global/local perspective. What's more is that my customers absolutely adore winter tulips. They send me love notes about how having flowers in their home during winter boosts their mood and gives them something hopeful and beautiful to get through the dark season with. I am confident that I am doing something good and wonderful for my community. Yet I recognize that posting a photo of winter tulips and using #slowflowers is a contradiction of sorts.” Well, Brooke, let’s put that concern to rest!

    48 Min.
  8. 13. NOV.

    Episode 690 – Elizabeth Fichter of Queen Bee Blooms shares how to have the conversation that will change perceptions around local flowers

    https://youtu.be/2d9_GRnbSrI?si=_UjIQWQALrUv-8OJ Owner of Queen Bee Blooms in St. Louis, Missouri, Elizabeth Fichter is a farmer-florist who has given a lot of thought to how she can differentiate her business from the conventional alternative. In today’s episode, she will outline six important actions you can take to better discuss the value and benefits of locally grown flowers with your B2B and B2C customers, as well as share specific things she does to keep her flowers front and center in her marketplace. Elizabeth Fichter of Queen Bee Blooms A few months ago, Elizabeth Fichter reached out to me about an article she was writing for the well-known farming publication, Growing for Market. The topic was a familiar one to the Slow Flowers community – how to change perceptions of local flowers with our customers. Elizabeth wanted to include the message and mission of the Slow Flowers movement in her piece, so we had a back-and-forth discussion as she worked on her article. Writing her story was an exercise that helped Elizabeth fine-tune her message and understand what makes Queen Bee Blooms’ brand authentic and unique. In doing the contemplative work on this piece, Elizbeth discovered what she wanted to share with others – and I invited her to join me on the Slow Flowers Podcast to continue the conversation. I know you'll find it relatable -- and I hope it will inspire you to make some creative changes in your own floral enterprise. Here's a bit more about Elizabeth and Queen Bee Blooms:Elizabeth is an artist and a life-long lover of flowers. She is an event designer, wedding planner, writer, dreamer and of course, farmer. For more than a century, her family has farmed the land that is now home to Queen Bee Blooms. As she writes on her website: Queen Bee Blooms with Elizabeth and her gorgeous flowers The flower fields at Queen Bee Blooms “This-164-acre farm has been in my family for over 100 years. When my great-grandfather purchased it, it had already been a working dairy and crop farm since the mid-1800's. Over the years, it has been taken care of by generations before me. As a small girl, I grew up here, moved away, saw the world, worked jobs that I loved, started a family, and visited on holidays and weekends. Until my mom passed away, I never thought it would or could  be mine alone. Given the opportunity (when remaining family wanted to sell it), I stopped everything in my life to return to where I began. In over 15 years, I've never looked back. I believe you end up exactly where you are supposed to be…I've followed my passion for flowers to create a farm that does things differently. “I grow flowers not because I have to. I grow them because it feeds my soul like nothing else. Spending my days amongst this splendor is a gift that I don't take lightly.  I have a responsibility of stewardship of not just this land, but especially the awe-inspiring beauty and magic it nurtures and grows. “ https://vimeo.com/916480526/02a3221db3?share=copy Click above to watch Elizabeth Fichter's video, "Why Local Flowers?" I’m excited to share our conversation with you today, And a special thank you to Andrew Mefferd, editor and publisher of Growing for Market, who generously shared a free link to Elizabeth’s October 2024 article, "How to have the conversation that will change perceptions around local flowers," with the Slow Flowers community so you can read it, too. Read Elizabeth's article in Growing for Market

    52 Min.

Info

The Slow Flowers Podcast is the award-winning, long-running show known as the "Voice of the Slow Flowers Movement." Airing weekly for more than 9 years, we focus on the business of flower farming and floral design through the Slow Flowers sustainability ethos. Listen to a new episode each Wednesday, available for free download here at slowflowerspodcast.com or on iTunes, Spotify, and other podcast platforms.

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