That’s a wrap on the summer flowers of 2021!
I cut thousands of stems over the season in spite of making SO many mistakes. The 2021 flower season began for me in January when I seeded my first lisianthus. I waited for those things to germinate for a month, then tossed the seed tray aside thinking I killed them all… they finally sprouted sometime in March. The one seed tray of pink lisianthus produced several hundred beautiful blooms! Mid-August was the last harvest of the pink lisianthus, they are in the bottom bucket in the pic below.

We planted several crops of sunflowers, mowed them down when they were done, and then planted more. The sweet, earthy smell of fresh cut sunflowers is a new favorite thing. I can’t wait to plant more next year!
I planted three crops of zinnias, the first was taken down by strong winds in May, so I started over with these beauties! Benarys Giants, they were spectacular all summer, and into September. They are also the favorite snack food of grasshoppers.

It’s already mid-September, and I am furiously seeding cool hardy annuals to plant out in the fields before the frost date in November. If winter doesn’t kill them, they will establish roots all winter and be the first to bloom when the warmer days arrive in very early spring. I am learning from local flower farmers, reading flower farming books, and of course YouTube.
Below are some pics of the 2021 summer flower season… already looking forward to 2022!
First bouquet from the greenhouse Queen Lime Zinnia, Stock, Snapdragons, China Asters, Dhara Snaps, China Aster, Flower Girl Zinnia, White Swan Marigold snapdragons out in the field I designed this bouquet with Kera Beasley in mind. Kera is our designer at the B&B and taught me so much about color palettes. Raymond and Jimmy’s old tractor, still works! Blooming Lisianthus! We found a floral cooler on Craig’s List! Raymond, Steven, Jimmy and Jeff miraculously move the beast into the house. Sounds like a jet engine, but keeps the blooms cool in the summer Sold my first bouquets at Spice Studio! A local bee keeper places some hives of honeybees next to our flower fields Jeff helps with weed control in the zinnia patch