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Slow Flowers Podcast

Debra Prinzing
Slow Flowers Podcast
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  • Episode 724: When a flower farmer opens a retail design studio, with Stacey Chapman of Westwind Flowers Farm & Studio
    https://youtu.be/_tDUwuW3ZGY?si=0gpALTpIPayQcwCG In early March, Stacey Chapman embarked on a new chapter for Westwind Flowers, opening a design studio and retail space in Gordonsville, Virginia. Adding this beautiful destination for her customers and the public means Westwind can provide more local flowers to their community on a greater scale with everydayflowers, expanded workshop space and events. As Stacey wrote in her announcement post: “We believe in the local and American grown floral industry. We have developed strong relationships with local and regional growers and look forward to working with them as we expand our business.” This was a big step fora small, family-run flower farm. But as you’ll hear in my conversation with Stacey, her background working in flower shops, not to mention her extensive community ties, led to the decision. I’m excited to share that story with you. Stacey and Tom Chapman of Westwind Flowers Farm & Studio Last fall, Stacey Chapman sent me a personal note via email – and it immediately made me think, “we have to record a podcast episode about her news!” Here’s what she shared: “The 'great divide' between local growers and 'traditional' shops is astounding in this area of Central Virginia with regard to local flowers. I have been frustrated by this since year one in my growing journey and finally decidedto take the plunge and do something different for my business." . . . "I love the sign at the beginning of your 'Slow Flowers' book of the definition of a florist…that's what I (many of us) do. The wholesale sales market just doesn't cut it for me though, nor do farmers' markets…so in 2025 I'm opening a retail site. Eeek…” Love this sign! The original definition of a FLORIST is having a comeback! The sign to which she refers is one I often include in my slide shows – an aging, somewhat rusty metal sign that I spotted outside a vacant storefront in Chicago – probably back in 2011. It reads like a Webster’s Dictionary entry: FLORIST (-noun), ‘One in the business of raising or selling flowers and ornamental plants.’” The promise of a beautiful rainbow -- over the fields at Westwind Flowers Stacey and I had a nice chat over the winter and she updated me on some of the news about her soon-to-open retail space. At Westwind Flowers, Stacey and her husband Tom Chapman are in their sixth season. They lease two acres of land from the Montpelier Foundation, the historic James Madison farm outside of Charlottesville, where they primarily raise field-grown flowers. "We are very aware of sustainability and what that means here," she says. "If we ever leave this land, we want to leave it in better conditions than we received it." The iconic green barn at Westwind Flowers, with summer dahlias in the foreground. Prior to Westwind Flowers being established there in 2019, the farmland had been used for horse grazing for nearly a century, and later planted in cover crops to attract natural pollinators. Prior to launching the new Westwind Flowers & Studio, they sold at farmers' markets, through CSA and flower share programs, and via a wholesale flower cooperative. Today, the reimagined business offers daily arrangements, special event florals, seasonal subscriptions, u-picks and workshops at the floral studio. Farming at the historic property of James Madison And take note, this interview begins with an engaging video filmed by Lorenzo Dickerson of Maupintown Media, a talented video storyteller who recently filmed a segment that brings Westwind Flowers Farm & Studio to life. A slice of summer flowers at Westwind Flowers Farm & Studio I love this sentiment from Stacey: “the love of flower-growing and seeing the joy on the end users’ face is thrilling for me and that is the customer who I am pursuing. The goal isn't to grow it All, but to grow and support those growers that I have come to have relationships with in my area.”
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  • Episode 723: Drawing from her family’s horticulture roots, Michigan-based farmer-florist Erin Webb of Florista of West Olive shares a farm tour and design demonstration
    https://youtu.be/D2d_-D2HVK8?si=VMUallUaLM2SBsum Erin Webb grew up immersed in plants and horticulture, following three generations of Michigan ornamental nursey owners before her. For as long as she can remember, Erin was immersed in the business of plants. After studying business and Spanish in college, and after an initial career in corporate America, in 2019, Erin returned to the land. She founded Florista of West Olive, since it to farm specialty cut flowers, design weddings and everyday arrangements, teach workshops, manage a CSA, and bring her blooms to the farmers’ market in Holland, Michigan. And now, her six-year-old son is experiencing a childhood much like Erin and her sister had. Listen in and learn how this full-circle journey has given Erin the floral business that fits her family’s lifestyle and beautifies her community. Erin Webb of Florista of West Olive Erin Webb calls herself a Chief Flower Organizer, and that’s an appropriate title for the founder of Florista West Olive, a western Michigan-based micro farm and design studio. Here's the completed floral design demonstration that Erin Webb filmed for our episode Earlier this week, Erin and I recorded a fun conversation to share with you, as she reflects on the past six years of her foray into cut flower farming and its emphasis on garden-inspired floral design. As a bonus, Erin recorded a tour of Florista’s growing and production areas, followed by a floral design demonstration featuring her signature bowl arrangement. It’s a packed episode, for sure, so I’m going to jump right in and get started. Grown and designed by Florista of West Olive Thank you for joining me today! I’m so grateful to Erin for her support of the Slow Flowers Movement as a member, and I hope her story is an inspiring one to you. Michigan-grown tulips at Florista of West Olive Find and follow Erin Webb, Florista of West Olive on Instagram and on Facebook 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. Thank you to our lead sponsor, Flowerbulb.eu and their U.S. lily bulb vendors. One of the most recognizable flowers in the world, the lily is a top-selling cut flower, offering long-lasting blooms, year-round availability, and a dazzling petal palette. Flowerbulb.eu has partnered with Slow Flowers to provide beautiful lily inspiration and farming resources to help growers and florists connect their customers with more lilies. Learn more at Flowerbulb.eu. Thank you to A-ROO Company, your one-stop shop for in-stock floral packaging. From sleeves and wraps to labels and tags, visit www.a-roo.com for their full selection of eco-friendly items or to start the process of developing a look that is uniquely yours. Learn more at www.a-roo.com. Thank you to Charles Little & Company for supplying our industry with some of the most beautiful and sustainably-grown design ingredients, available nationwide through their website at charleslittleandcompany.com. Based in Eugene, Oregon, the farmers at Charles Little & Company have been growing and drying flowers since 1986. New products and dried flower collections are added to their website at the first of each month. Check it out at charleslittleandcompany.com. Thank you for joining me today! The Slow Flowers Podcast is a member-supported endeavor, downloaded more than 1.5 million times by listeners like you. Thank you for listening, commenting and sharing – it means so much. As our movement gains more supporters and more passionate participants who believe in the importance of our domestic cut flower industry, the momentum is contagious. I know you feel it, too. If you’re new to our weekly Show and our long-running Podcast,
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  • Episode 722: Ondrea Kidd of Post Falls, Idaho-based Sowing Joy Farm named Top 10 Florists to Watch in 2025 by MSN
    https://youtu.be/EiLxxVb7v9k?si=N590_MIvVkx3Yabg Ondrea Kidd has been recognized by MSN as one of the “Top 10 Florists to Watch in 2025”, bolstering the farm’s status as a leader in eco-friendly, heirloom floral design. The report highlighted innovators shaping the future of luxury floral design and it came as a complete surprise to this farmer-florist based in Post Falls, Idaho. Through the use of uncommon botanicals and sustainable design practices, as well as Sowing Joy’s many floral-based hospitality projects, the added national attention reflects Ondrea’s desire to creatively express art and experiences with the flowers she grows. Sunflowers at Sowing Joy Farm Founded in 2020 by Ondrea and Chad Kidd in Post Falls, Idaho, Sowing Joy Farm began as a family passion project focused on growing heirloom, organic flowers to bring joy to their community. Since then, it has blossomed into a dynamic operation that offers u-pick flower experiences, wreath-making workshops, floral arranging classes, and overnight lodging at The Shepherd’s Hut. The Kidd family, including their six children and a granddaughter, plays an active role in the farm’s daily life, reflecting a deep-rooted dedication to both family and community values. Floral design by Ondrea Kidd Ondrea is the heart of Sowing Joy Farm, a passionate farmer-florist with a love for cultivating and designing with healthy, sustainably grown blooms. Her journey into floral design started with a deep connection to gardening and the joy that flowers bring to the lives of her customers and clients. Hand-tied bouquet The farm is nestled in the scenic landscapes of Northern Idaho, where Ondrea and her husband Chad live, along with their six amazing children, one beloved granddaughter, and a few farm animals who add to the charm of our farm. From lodging at The Sheperd’s Hut, their farm stay Tiny House, on-farm workshops, and u-pick events to wedding florals or everyday hand-tied bouquets, Ondrea spreads joy through flowers. Recently, this longtime Slow Flowers Member was featured as a top 10 Florist to Watch in an article featured by MSN.com – and we congratulate Ondrea for this recognition. I invited Ondrea to share her story today – in addition to our interview, please check out the beautiful, 3-minute video tour of Sowing Joy Farm, produced with the folks at Idaho Preferred, a program of the Idaho State Department of Agriculture. Through Sowing Joy Farm, Ondrea donates flowers to local and national organizations, as well as to individuals in need, as part of the farm’s Petals of Joy program. She says: “I believe flowers carry a special power to bring us closer together, to celebrate love and connection, and to remind us of the deep bonds we share with each other and our creator.” Follow the links in our show notes to learn more about how you can nominate a deserving recipient of a Petals of Joy bouquet. Find and follow Sowing Joy Farm at these social places: Instagram and FacebookMore about The Shepherd's Hut lodging Read More:MSN Story herePress Release here 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. Thank you to our lead sponsor, Flowerbulb.eu and their U.S. lily bulb vendors. One of the most recognizable flowers in the world, the lily is a top-selling cut flower, offering long-lasting blooms, year-round availability, and a dazzling petal palette. Flowerbulb.eu has partnered with Slow Flowers to provide beautiful lily inspiration and farming resources to help growers and florists connect their customers with more lilies. Learn more at Flowerbulb.eu.Thank you to Rooted Farmers. Rooted Farmers works exclusively with local growers to put the highest-quality specialty cut ...
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  • Episode 721: Designer-Grower Annika McIntosh of Hazel Designs and a bonus tour of Bellingham’s Field to Floral Market
    https://youtu.be/E1exuo5iMOU A few weeks ago, I journeyed to Bellingham, a beautiful college town located close to the Washington-British Columbia border, where Annika McIntosh of Hazel Designs grows botanicals, designs gardens, and arranges flowers for everyday customers, weddings, and events. During what was a lovely morning in the garden and studio, I spent time with Annika to learn about how she has expanded beyond designing landscapes to fashion a floral-centric career. As she explained, rather than calling herself a "farmer-florist," she likes to say she's a "Designer / Grower." Not a farmer, per se, but a grower of uncommon and unique cut florals -- annuals, bulbs, perennials, shrubs, vines, trees, grasses, and other surprises that are displayed in custom hand-tied bouquets and event installations. We filmed a brief garden tour and then went right in to the backyard studio space where Annika, her husband, and their daughter are living temporarily, while renovating their home that's located at the front of the generously-sized city property. I know you'll enjoy our conversation while watching Annika design with early-summer botanicals. Floral arrangement by Annika McIntosh, which she designed during our interview (see above), (c) Annika McIntosh Annika grew up in the gentle, old hills south of the Adirondacks and east of the Hudson River in upstate New York with two artisan parents who built an off-grid home and raised cows and a highly productive vegetable garden. Annika's father is a fine cabinetmaker turned bass luthier (that means "maker of stringed instruments"; he is also a musician and local politician) and her mother is a basket maker and gardener (as well as a musician, educator and organizer), and they are very much rooted there in the small community where Annika was exposed to a lot of amazing gardens, music, art and progressive thinking. Glorious wedding bouquet by Hazel Designs' Annika McIntosh (c) Lindsey Paradiso Annika studied dance, environmental studies and studio art at Oberlin College and Landscape Architecture at the University of Washington. She lived in Montreal for a few years before moving to Seattle and has been in Bellingham for the past 6 years. National and global events have definitely shaped her career path, as the 2008 depression dashed hopes that she might join a design firm. Instead, she started Hazel Landscapes, a design/build company. The family's move to Bellingham coincided with the pandemic. At first, that felt like starting over, but it also allowed her to stay small and scrappy and build her business again from the ground up, with word-of-mouth, in a way that she feels good about.  Front cutting garden at Hazel Designs, Bellingham, Washington (c) Annika McIntosh Annika's garden at home is a demonstration of what can be grown -- for ornamental and pollinator/bird foraging purposes, as well as for cutting -- with very little tending or water and no protection from deer grazing. She says: "I love to remind people that they can cut widely from their home landscape without making a designated 'cutting garden,' using foliage from shrubs and other plants they might not think of as 'flowers.' Foraging from pruning piles and then testing vase life and aesthetic utility of landscape ornamentals was what got me into cut flowers in the first place, and I still find it more engaging than growing typical field flowers. (I'm also not set up as a farm, so my home landscape is my focus and it's all 'fair game.') It is definitely more of a long game, with slower-growing plants, but that's also where I can find branches or stems with real personality that build a gestural narrative in an arrangement. I find that local, seasonal foliage is a more appealing complement aesthetically than the ubiquitous ruscus, smilax, leatherleaf fern, eucalyptus and other florist's greens, making an arrangement or bouquet really special in a beautiful, of-the-moment uniqueness."
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  • Episode 720: Killing Frost Farm’s Jamie Rogers on solo flower farming in western Montana
    https://youtu.be/9-oJEifK-u0?si=gW8_eyURbbSIEufO Growing specialty cut flowers for retail floral shops is a very specific niche and today’s guest, Jamie Rogers of Killing Frost Farm in Helena, Montana, has a lot to share on this topic! Jamie co-founded the business with Carly Jenkins in 2014, the “killing frost” name a tongue-in-cheek reference to extreme drops to freezing temperatures that are brutal for flowers. Today, Jamie farms solo and supplies retailers between Bozeman to the east and Missoula to the west and he has maximized efficiencies to supply quantities of unique perennials and annuals to a core base of floral customers week in and week out throughout the season. We’ll wrap up this conversation with a peek into Jamie’s other passion – music – as he shares a new song from the upcoming album he recorded with Les Duck, the local band he performs with as drummer. It’s a great reminder for all of us to find work-life balance in this demanding world of flower growing and design. Jamie Rogers of Killing Frost Farm (c) Chasing Light Photography As we continue to share the inspiring content from the pages of The Flower Farmers, our new book featuring the stories of 29 expert growers across North America, we’re taking a stop today in western Montana, to meet Jamie Rogers of Killing Frost Farm. Delphiniums at Killing Frost Farm Jamie is a past guest of this podcast, and I’m so happy that he had a chance to record a new conversation with him last week. After farming in Western Montana for more than a decade, on several locations both urban and rural, Jamie and his former partner Carly Jenkins moved Killing Frost Farm to Helena in 2021. Their two-acre parcel of land in the fertile Prickly Pear Valley is surrounded by rolling hills and views of Mount Helena.There are so many benefits of this new location, including access to well water, distance from fire threats, and proximity to city amenities. The farm pumps out an impressive crop list – including sunflower, strawflower, stock, snapdragon, foxglove, scabiosa, zinnia, gomphrena, amaranth, marigold, cosmos, larkspur, Queen Anne’s lace, sea  holly, and delphinium – the specialty crop we featured in a bonus spread in The Flower Farmers. Killing Frost Farm You’ll want to wait until the very end of our interview for a delightful bonus track of a song titled “Head Fell Off” from the upcoming album Jamie and his fellow band members produced – no surprise, inside the Killing Frost barn, which they converted to a recording studio! I loved this conversation and I love the energy and joy Jamie shares about flower farming. It can be brutal and demanding, but his story is a reminder to find balance and quality of life in the journey. Sunflowers and Nori Follow Jamie at his new IG account @montanaflowerfarmer, and @les_duck, where details on the album release of “Love is the Dirt,” will be announced later this summer. 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. Thank you to our lead sponsor, Flowerbulb.eu and their U.S. lily bulb vendors. One of the most recognizable flowers in the world, the lily is a top-selling cut flower, offering long-lasting blooms, year-round availability, and a dazzling petal palette. Flowerbulb.eu has partnered with Slow Flowers to provide beautiful lily inspiration and farming resources to help growers and florists connect their customers with more lilies. Learn more at Flowerbulb.eu.Thank you to the Association of Specialty Cut Flowers. The ASCFG is a gathering place for specialty cut flower growers of all levels of experience. It is a hub of knowledge, where seasoned experts and budding enthusiasts come together to learn, share, and support one another.
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Om 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.
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