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july 2008

Comment 5

July 25, 2008 | flower facts

Flowers and pets: Best bets for furry friends

by Jacqueline


A general rule of thumb when you bring flowers home and your animals immediately want to investigate: Paws off! Or to be more precise, Jaws off!

Being a cat owner, I know it can be a challenge, but don’t let cats and dogs ingest parts (petals, leaves, roots, etc.) of any plant. Making a point to keep your bouquet in a spot that’s not easily accessible by Fluffy and Fido will make life easier for your entire household.

Another tip: Familiarize yourself with which blooms are safe for pets and which could be toxic.

For that info, I consulted several pages of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals' web site aspca.org and compiled the lists below.

For a more extensive list of toxic plants, visit: aspca.org/site/PageServer?pagename=pro_apcc_toxicplants.  

The nontoxic plant list appears at: aspca.org/site/PageServer?pagename=pro_apcc_nontoxicplants. And if there is a flower you’re wondering about (ie you don’t see it on either list) check with your vet. Or drop me an e-mail and I will try to find out.

Orchid Elegance
 
Orchids are a great choice if you have pets or are sending a floral bouquet to a pet owner.

Safe flowers for pets
African violet
Asters
Camellia
Canna lilies (Most lilies are toxic but these are not of the Lilium genus.)
Common snapdragon, Garden snapdragon
Cornflower
Hollyhock
Jasmine
Orchids
Pot marigold
Summer hyacinth

Common flowers to avoid
Azalea
Baby’s breath
Chrysanthemum
Cyclamen
Daisies
Lilies, including calla lily
Oleander
Rhododendron
Also: Potted Amaryllis, Tulips and Narcissus/Daffs (The bulbs are the most toxic.)

Flower Fact of the Day: Does your garden lack energy? Find out how to spice it up from master gardener Marty Wingate, writing in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer: http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/nwgardens/370997_wingate17.html.  

Comment 4

July 24, 2008 | flower facts

Favorite summer flowers: Fleur du jour in Victorian England with a link to Princess Diana

by Jacqueline

Stunning Mixed Flowers Mothers Day Bouquet  Royal Radiance
 
What makes a great summer flower? Color and scent are key, as is a blossom that grows easily in the garden and makes a super cut flower. A classic example: Sweet pea. On its own or as an accent piece (as shown in the bouquet), this annual with a talent for climbing conjures the sunshine and good times of the season.

The sweet pea likes full sun and, in cooler climates, it can bloom through fall. For more growing tips, go to: http://gardening.about.com/od/plantprofiles/p/SweetPea.htm.  

Like other pea plants, the flower can self-pollinate, which makes it a logical choice for scientific experimentation, especially in the field of genetics. But unlike its pea relatives, the sweet pea is not edible.

Native to the Mediterranean, the sweet pea’s story begins in 17th century Italy with a Sicilian monk who sent the flower’s seeds to England.

Next chapter: A Scottish nurseryman named Henry Eckford (1823-1905) experimented with the seeds to create a more vivid and fragrant flower. With Eckford’s tweaking, the sweet pea became fleur du jour in Victorian England.

His varieties include pink, lavender and scarlet; today it’s also available in blue and white.

The Countess Spencer sweet pea, popular with exhibitors, was first developed around 1900 by the gardener at Althorp, the estate of Earl Spencer in Northamptonshire, England, and childhood home of Princess Diana. If you’re growing Spencer sweet peas for fragrance, choose the right variety. Lighter colors usually have a stronger scent than darker colors. To read more, visit: plantsmiths.co.uk/home/sweet-peas.  

Flower Fact of the Day: “Toadflax” and “tufted vetch” top the list of native English wildflowers with zany names. :) See the full roster and find out how a former journalist and author has turned her attention to selling English roses she grows in her own garden – to celebrities like Victoria Beckham, no less! Go to The Independent at: independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/blooming-marvellous-how-one-farmer-is-leading-a-revival-of-the-true-english-rose-869595.html.
 

Comment 1

July 23, 2008 | teleflora news

Delivering flowers, delivering smiles

by Jacqueline


For an office-bound flower lover, ie me, it’s nice to get out in the real world once in a while. Over the weekend, I attended Blogher.com’s conference in San Francisco. Yesterday, I met a fantastic Teleflora florist and helped deliver flowers as part of the company’s Make Someone Smile Week, a program to give our Be Happy bouquets to those in need of a pick-me-up.

My TF colleagues and I headed over to the Veteran’s Hospital in West Los Angeles, where we met up with Liz Seiji, owner of Edelweiss Flower Boutique in Santa Monica, edelweissflower.com, and her team.

Nearly 20 florists helped arrange 300 bouquets; about a half-dozen assisted with delivery. Local wholesalers and growers donated flowers.

Make Someone Smile Week
     One of my Teleflora colleagues gives a bouquet  
     to a patient at the VA Hospital in West LA.


“Typically at a hospital you see an abundance of flowers, but here it’s not uncommon not to see flowers,” said Liz. “Some of the patients feel like they’re forgotten. Delivering these flowers lets the vets know that there are people out there thinking of them. They are appreciated.

“And the majority of them are men so they’re not used to receiving flowers. It lightens their load and it’s very rewarding. I get a lot of satisfaction out of it.”

Liz and her husband Tony also tapped a dozen helpers from local chapters of the Elks, American Legion and Freemasons.

“Vets are No.1,” said Raedean Kiesz of the Santa Monica Elks Lodge #906. “As long as there is a vet there, there’ll be an Elk to help take care of that vet.”

Don Glaza, commander of American Legion Lodge #177, thought the Be Happy bouquets were a natural. “You can see how the flowers cheer everybody up. Flowers put a smile on everybody’s face.”

One of those faces was outpatient and former Marine Manuel Guerrero who said flowers are a reminder that a positive attitude is key to beating his illness. “You have to believe you’re going to get better,” he said.

“Oh, you have to,” agreed hospital volunteer Beverly Moore, who radiated optimism and positive energy as she greeted patients and staff on the delivery rounds. Beverly is also a veteran. “We’re here for each other,” she told me.

Outpatient and former Marine Tom Short also smiled when he saw the mugs of bright blooms. “Flowers are nice. They brighten up the place.”

Make Someone Smile Week runs through Saturday. For more information, please visit teleflora.com/makesomeonesmile.

Flower Fact of the Day: Florists across the U.S. and Canada are participating in Make Someone Smile Week. Read what happened in a Colorado town where flowers cheered those who endured hardships after a tornado in May: coloradoan.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080723/BUSINESS/807230351.  
 

Comment 2

July 22, 2008 | floral trends

Why white hydrangeas rule

by Jacqueline


White Hydrangeas and Calla Lilies

I’ve had white hydrangeas on the brain lately. They’re clean, cool and strikingly simple. And, when it comes to flower arranging, they’re mighty efficient.

I like to take just one branch, snip off the leaves, pop it in a tall square vase and put it on my nightstand or bathroom sink. (Naturally, that’s always the exact moment at which my cat springs up and tries to start chomping.)

For a bigger space, I use a larger vase and add a few more branches, leaving the leaves on. If I’m having people over, I might add a few seashells or small stones to the bottom of the vase.

I love the way hydrangeas’ cloverlike petals – floppy and fluffy, yet elegant and dramatic – tumble softly over the edge of the vase. I love that this “white” flower is often a mixture of cream and pale pink, dappled with green or streaked with light blue.

And I prefer hydrangeas’ subtle fragrance to strongly scented white flowers like freesia or gardenia.

The name hydrangea comes from the Greek and, roughly translated, means “water barrel." That's because hydrangeas are thirsty blooms and their petals resemble little cups.

Hydrangeas look stunning at events, too. I worked with Victoria at Rossi & Rovetti Flowers, a top San Francisco florist, rossirovetti.com, to provide flowers for last weekend’s Blogher.com conference of about 1,000 mostly women bloggers.

I chose two big bouquets of white hydrangeas and one bouquet of white calla lilies, surrounded by white hydrangeas. It looked terrific!

Give them a try sometime this summer and let me know what you think.

Flower Fact of the Day: What went wrong with Denver’s plan to grow a new variety of daisy (named in honor of the city) in time for the Democratic National Convention demconvention.com next month? Read the New York Times report at: nytimes.com/2008/07/19/us/19daisies.html?ref=us.  
 

Comment 13

July 17, 2008 | teleflora news

Free flowers: 14 days left to enter!

by Jacqueline


Send Sunny Smiles Flower Bouquet
I'm in San Francisco for the Blogher.com conference and looking forward to meeting lots of fellow scribes. Meanwhile, don't forget to enter Flower Blog's monthly floral bouquet sweepstakes. Make a comment on any post this month and you'll be automatically entered. The winner for July will be picked on or around Aug. 1. To see the official rules, teleflorist.com/FLOWERBLOG/post/Teleflora-Flower-Blog-Sweepstakes-(July).aspx.

Good luck, flower fans, and enjoy your summer bouquets.