175. Floret Flower Farm | Floret Farm’s Cut Flower Garden: Grow, Harvest, and Arrange Seasonal Blooms | Erin Benzakein | Skagit Valley, WA

Well, I couldn’t be more honored then to introduce todays guest who won’t need much of an introduction at all because she has been mentioned by many of my guest for her inspiration, her incredibly informative blog and now her new book coming out! She follows my passion for flowers and has written the book she wishes was there when she started out called Floret Farm’s Cut Flower Garden: Grow, Harvest, and Arrange Seasonal Blooms which was recommended by Jean Martin Fortier when I recently interviewed him who wrote a blurb for it so…
Tell us a little about yourself.
I have a two acre flower farm its called Floret about an hour north of Seattle.
What we’re known for is squeezing a ton of flowers into a really tiny space and we grow more like 4-5 acres in our two small little acres here.
Alright, well were probably excited to hear about how your pulling that off!
Tell me about your first gardening experience?
Well my parents, my dad was an avid gardener so I definitely grew up around nature… but when I was little, tiny like as far back as I can remember I would dig up weeds and plant them in long straight rows … my mom remembers I wasn’t even in kindergarten yet I would always ask for a a little plot of land which I never got! I grew up in the suburbs and I would plant little weeds in straight rows it was almost like I knew what my destiny was gonna be back then …
I bet a lot of listeners have memories of picking weeds and maybe not putting them in straight rows… but like picking a dandelion and putting it in the ground to grow…
How did you learn how to garden organically was your dad that way?
When we were, my kids were born, I started paying more and more attention, when I was pregnant ~ what I was putting in my body and then I had heard about pesticides and started eating organically and that whole world opened up and when I started growing my first garden at my house
- my own vegetables
- planted an orchard
- got chickens and
- did all those things
I knew I didn’t want to use any chemicals and started researching and learning all I could… so I read Eliot Coleman’s book
The New Organic Gardener by Eliot Coleman
It was more of a farming book and applied those things to my vegetable garden …. As the flowers took over my life I just kept applying those organic prinicipals to everything I was growing… because I didn’t want to be
- surrounded by chemicals and
- babies playing in the mud I’m not gonna
- spray chemcials in my yard
From the beginning really in my own personal garden always… been organic…
So do you want to tell us how you got flowers?
So we left the city …I grew up in the suburbs then in Seattle, I was a city kid
a city kid who’s always longing to live in the country so when my husband Chris and I got married and we had our daughter
Olora
I had this really deep …. a strong calling … we have to get out of the city … and we need to go now! … and go put down roots somewhere! We looked for a little over a year but we
couldn’t afford until we discovered the Skagit Valley… this beautiful place we now call home and we bought a house with an acre…
- tilled up a garden
- planted an orchard
- got chickens
- wanted to have an homestead
which is hysterical now, I’m like totally lazy in some ways and I can’t imagine slaughtering my own chickens and all that… I had this idealistic…
it sounds dreamy right…
it totally does and it’s disgusting when you actually do it …. we tried
so the more we tried…. I wanted all these things
- heriloom orchard
and
- heirloom chickens
I tried all these different ideas out for maybe a way I could be growing things and be home with my kids and also bring in some income … and flowers really … after a lot of trial and error and testing out a bunch of ideas … it was when I saw how someone reacted …
Why Flowers
I delivered a bundle of sweet peas a $5 jar of flowers to this woman and I handed them to her and she smelled them and she just started bawling and telling me all these memories and I had childhood memories associated with sweet peas and then I started crying … right there standing on her doorstep and we’re both bawling and I knew this is what I am supposed to do!
These little tiny blooms had so much power… I wasn’t even aware of that and so I came home
- tore out the vegetables
- tore up the orchard gave it away
- got rid of most of the chickens and
- planted as many flowers as I could pack into my backyard
- more and more and bigger
- took over the neighbors back field …
and it grew from there
“So you took over the neighbors backyard, that’s an interesting way to expand… so you’re renting or leasing?”
We are leasing.. Our house is on 1 acre … maybe a 1/6 of an acre so it’s like a very large garden off our back porch… there’s 2 acre field that borders our back property it was a
- horse pasture
- became a soccer field
and then one day my neighbors lawn maker broke down and he was angry and frustrated and his kids weren’t playing on the soccer field… and I ran out there with a bunch of cash begged him to let me rent it … and he said yes, and I caught him at the right moment…
I started tilling up that field and planting more flowers so in total we’re only growing 2 acres of flowers…
So my next question is then how did find your market if your kind of far from town…. where do you see things and how did you get that part?
What To Do With Flowers?
The first couple of years, it was figuring out what do I want to with flowers?
- Did I want to do weddings?
- I did a weekly flower subscription
- I tried a lot of different things …
- people weren’t really biting
I was really really struggling to sell the flowers the first 2-3 years I couldn’t figure out how to sell them, I could figure out how to grow the flowers but I getting people to take them was a whole other story
I figured out how to grow them
I was interviewing this woman for a farming article I was writing she was talking about being the face of my business.
I’m naturally very shy, and naturally introverted she said instead of doing a logo and the business name that I actually
- hire a photographer
- put on a cute outfit
- take pictures of me holding the flowers
I was like Omg are you kidding me, no way am I gonna do that… but I was desperate, and nobody would by my stuff and everybody was a little bit panicked when I walked into a flower shop I was a little aggressive with my
Buy local
nobody cared about local what I didn’t realize what they really cared about was our story, as an artisan maker what they care about is
- why you do it
- who you are
Market your story
So I changed out all my marketing material and added pictures of my family and i working with the flowers and it all changed since I haven’t really had to sell anyone… I just tell our story and people totally connect with it…
So where do you sell them then at florists or farmer’s markets or I thought you sold to a CSA?
- we sell to 24 Whole Food Stores throughout the Pacific NW
- boxes to the largest CSA in the country full circle farm and our spring blooms they ship to
- Alaska
- Idaho
- California
- all over
- local florists
- local wedding of florists
they go a ton of places I would say natural grocery foods like whole foods have been our biggest customers from day one.
What’s the weather like in the Skagit Valley, I would think Valentines, Mothers’s Day in the Rocky Mountains
- we’re more mild for sure
- we have a very wet cool spring
- daffodils just poking out of the soil….
- over the years more and more hoop houses so now we have
- 11 hoop houses – 2 of which are heated
haven’t forced things out of seasons just extended our season
Season
Mid March we’ll be picking anemones through oct nov kind of when we close the farm down…
at least from field and farm work
Tell us about something that grew well last year or last season…
Dahlia’s are always a huge beautiful crop for us so last year we had over 7000 plants in the field! I am kind of crazy I like to plant in rainbow order so for the photos…
So it went form burgundy all the way to red to raspberry all the way to white…
Probably biggest and best dahlia season to date…
The feeling of standing in the middle of that beauty it’s hard to even catch your breath…
So is it true your husband takes most of the pictures?
Photography Magic
Yep taught ourselves photography … the ones that look overhead…those are the ones I shoot
unless it’s a picture of our entire family where we bring a photographer in… he does all the pictures for
- our shop
- for our website…
- he really has quite a talent
Are there any tips and tricks you want to share they’re so beautiful…
we usually
Evening Glow
we have really beautiful light
we don’t use any special stuff we don’t to a ton of editing… occasionally we have clone out a blue port-o-potty out in the background because they’re so annoying and ugly ~ we ask the berry picking guys please move that….
there’s a bright blue one in the back field …
there’s very little editing we do…
Magic Light Hour
- last hour before daylight
- all of a sudden everything starts to glow
- sparkly and twinkly
either shooting in the early morning when the sun is rising or in the evening when the sun is setting that’s what is giving that stunning glow and then we try to put the sun behind the subject
If I’m standing and Chris is shooting me with a bouquet of flowers I try to stand with sun behind me so it’s throwing it’s light through the blooms and behind me and so it’s creating that magical glowing quality…
Well they are stunning and gorgeous and A lot of it is the flowers your growing, the bulk of them it is… all together…
it does’ it goes on forever… the berry fields behind us there’s rows and rows and … a lot of people thing they’re ours but it’s just the farms around us… we’re this little postage farm in the middle of all these gigantic farms all around us.
Is there something you would do different next year or want to try/new?
This year our biggest farm goal
We have a small seed company that we started last year… we’re bringing in seeds from all my favorite breeders all over the world
all of my favorite cut varieties mentioned in the book….
ones the …
Resurrecting the sweet pea
We have seeds from the best sweet pea seed sin the world
growing them out on the farm
10000 little seedlings in the greenhouse
We’re going whole hog to growing our own seed
importing is getting harder
due to drought in California and New Zealand
growing out some other varieties … dip our toe into that world….
we have our own seed line
take our own
I love the way you said we’re gonna dip our toe into that world… and that’s where Skype dropped the call…
I saw that you have that little blog post you wrote that has the pictures
Floret Seeds
We have our own seed line ….
- 100 varieties of seed
- dahlia tubers
- bulbs from holland our favorite varieties…
- 2nd year doing that
- expanding
certain varieties that we can’t get our hands on or there is a world shortage that’s why
falling out of favor and the seed breeders are going to drop the lines that’s why we’re trying to catch up and speed to grow out these varieties
hold those genetics save them for extinction…
Normally in the field when you grow them for cut flowers you hardly ever see any color in the field… if the flower field full of color you know there’s a problem the farmer hasn’t sold their product …
- mostly green
- have to let the flowers blow out and be pollinated and set seed instead of harvesting
- certainly isolation distances…
- sweet peas don’t need a ton of separation between 10 and 15 feet some need like sweet peas
- 300 feet and some need a quarter of a mile
- trying to find that information
- getting in touch of info
- there’s tons of info on vegetables…
- around seed saving for flowers specifically
- working on this and kind of pioneering
to gather information and make it available for others….
Tell me about something that didn’t work so well this season.
Dinner Plate Dahlias
This year we grew, we normally grow dinner plate dahlias… the big beautiful fat, ones that are great for flower arranging so here in Washington, they get damaged growing outside so we grow them in a greenhouse and we devoted a huge amount of our greenhouse space to dinner plate dahlias
The cut flower crop was spectacular, but the problem was when we went to dig those tubers normally you get 7,5,10 tubers because the greenhouses were so hot and humid the tubers were awful…
So we know know if we want to grow them for tubers and to save more tubers out of them don’t plant them in the hoop houses …. so that was a hard lesson learned we lost a good 25% of our tubers that were planted in the hoop houses to rot…
Did you still get to harvest the flowers…
So we didn’t get to increase our stock… so for us knowing as much as we do as flowers that was a pretty big failure… but every year we blow it on a lot of levels… that’s where you learn the most but they are the most painful mistakes and the hardest to learn but it’s part of gardening and growing…
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Let’s Get to the Root of Things!
Which activity is your least favorite activity to do in the garden?
I hate weeding, I absolutely despise it ….and I procrastinate like crazy …
and that just makes it worse?
What is your favorite activity to do in the garden?
Harvesting Dahlias
My favorite thing is harvesting especially at dusk when nobody’s around the tractors are kind of in the background just strolling thru the field picking that’s pretty amazing…
So how many flowers do you harvest a day? I was listening to the Martha Stewart interview and you were talking about harvesting 1000s of flowers …. that seemed my big goal a couple of years ago when I first started my podcast was to plant 750 sunflowers was my challenge for myself and that seemed huge and I realized if I was gonna sell sunflowers I would have to grow like 750 a week for like 12 weeks…
We’re harvesting full tilt 3 1/2 days a week and we are fast too…
on average when we’re picking dahlias…
we’re picking between 400-500 bunches of 5 stems
that’s like an average dahlia harvest during peak season….
Sunflower Harvest
We haven’t been growing sunflowers in the last couple of years because they take so much space but the last time we did sunflowers we did about 35,000 that year…
OM Goodness… in your little two acres?
we turn and burn so when something’s done we till it in and replant the beds. So we
try to get as crops as we possibly can…
So I always try to get my sunflowers in by April 22nd by Earth Day…When do you start?
Normally I go right about our last frost about the 25th of April and then plant them about every single week until about mid July with the fast flowering sunflowers to get them to bloom before the fall frost…
I guess you’re not as worried about them going to seed… I mean I pretty much decided that I’m just sticking with sunflowers for bird feed… there was a day I was dreaming about being a cut flower farmer but I don’t think I have what it takes… maybe if IDK if we did it full time all the time more together then I do… it sure looks beautiful but IDK…
What is the best gardening advice you have ever received?
NEVER CUT CORNERS
Well you reap what you sow or you get back what you put in
I hear this year in and year out… if I never cut corners if I don’t compare a bed with enough compost and fertilizer …. something that’s stressed and I plant it anyway… any time I try to get away with something … it always bites me in the but anyway… I have never been able to pull one over on nature …
Really the more generous you can be and do things…
do your best the more your rewarded the more I cut corners… at least for me… it never works out…
I think that’s great advice and you certainly know what you’re doing… and certainly a main theme on my show has been soil health and so I’m sure what your saying if you don’t put ht e best compost and try to get that bed up to the best it can be … what about pests do you have problems with pests? that’s been a big challenge my listeners the two biggest things are time and then pests are their biggest challenges …
Pest trouble
- Earwigs
- Slugs
So here earwigs and slugs are really big pests for us… we’re not plagued with Japanese beetles which is amazing but the slugs get in an and ruin all your crops and baby plants… and then the
ear wigs come out and night and bite big holes in all our flowers so there’s the product it’s
- certified organic
- safe for pets
called Sluggo plus
I buy it by the big ole bag
Miracle Solution
That’s my miracle solution for both of those…
A favorite tool that you like to use? If you had to move and could only take one tool with you what would it be.
I’d say my little Japanese wedding hoe,
- angled
- super sharp
I hate to hoe
I want it to be really fast…
IDK my husband makes weeding seem so easy… he’s usually on top of it, I feel like we don’t get a lot of weeds at our place… where do you get the most weeds? Between your rows???
WEEDS
In our beds too … you guys are probably more dry …
But we’re consistently moist, a little bit of heat and moisture and everything germinates… we use a lot of landscape fabric to keep weeds down in our pathways and also for our growing beds and
burn holes in the fabric so we can plant through it…
But weeds are a constant problem because everything is so moist everything wants to grow….
Incorporating food into bouquets
I usually ask about a favorite recipe you like to cook from the garden, IDK do you have a favorite flower arrangement??
One of my favorite things to do is to incorporate food into bouquets
- little current tomatoes
- pear tomatoes
- and herbs that have gone to seed
- green beans on the stem… they looks so cool when they are tumbling out of the side
most people who don’t even notice flowers but when you have the unripe raspberries that is a great conversation starter….
A favorite internet resource besides your amazing website which is a great resource…
website that I stalk the most
a grower in England
she has the most informative website with so many resources
- videos and
- articles she’s written
I feel like I could spend weeks on there… not even get to the bottom of it,
- photography is stunning
- everything she says to do it works
- go to source for information and inspirations…
Speaking of resources I saw on your website you have that gorgeous garden journal is that new this year too? What a year for you!
I love it it’s what I wanted to have for myself, it’s what we feel is the perfect garden journal, next year we’ll have a pocket for plant tags…
I just love it!
A favorite reading material-book, mag etc you can recommend?
My new favorite books
Ariella Chezar
floral designer in NY and she is the loveliest person…
The Flower Workshop: Lessons in Arranging Blooms, Branches, Fruits, and Foraged Materials
one of the most beautiful books I have ever had and I collect books and it feels like
your heart gets ripped out and stomped on in the best way…
- it is so stunning!
- so many flower arrangements!
- such great stories!
If you have a business to you have any advice for our listeners about how to sell extra produce or get started in the industry?
I would say that at least what I have found and this goes across any industry…
Sharing Your Story
- being yourself
- being the face of your business
- really we want to hide behind the product that we make or
- hide behind the flowers
- hide behind the produce
You can step out from behind what our’e creating and actually show up so that customers can get to know you and why your doing what your doing
across the board
most connecting ultimately sets you apart
most successful are the ones that share their story….
Are you a millennial?
IDK I was born in 1980.
Another Rockstar Millennial! The Millennial I get to interview are the best! My step-daughter was born in 1980 and she’s one of the hardest working people I ever met both of my step-daughters are and they both are amazing hard workers!
Final question- if there was one change you would like to see to create a greener world what would it be? For example is there a charity or organization your passionate about or a project you would like to see put into action. What do you feel is the most crucial issue facing our planet in regards to the environment either in your local area or on a national or global scale?
DROP the CHEMICALS!
Well, I feel like we at home … home gardeners can actually make the biggest difference by
DROP the CHEMICALS!
- stop using chemicals in your soil!
- start feeding your soil!
- growing more beautiful things!
- food for the pollinators!
- an environment for your grand children!
- creating these little oasis’s in our own backyards…
That was beautiful …. That’s a big part of my husband and my mission is to help people grow their own little organic oasis, he worries so much bout is there gonna be a planet for our future generations… I feel like I am blessed because I get to talk with my guests and listeners I ‘m a little more optimistic….
Right!
I just think that is perfect!
Do u have an inspiration tip or quote to help motivate our listeners to reach into that dirt and start their own garden?
My favorite own motto don’t worry about making mistakes … just get your hands in there and get dirty… you’ll learn the most by making mistakes and so often what doesn’t work is what ends up teaching you the most so just get in there and try and don’t worry about killing plants because you’re gonna kill a lot of them… so just make peace with that from the beginning…
Thanks so much for coming on and sharing your journey and being so eloquent!
How do we connect with you?
So you can go to our website Floret Flowers
big ole blog full of all kinds of info…
there’s a little button that says book…
Amazon’s got it
amazonUK
hopefully there’s something there you can learn!
If you would like a chance to win a copy of Erin’s Book just enter a comment with your favorite take-away from this episode or a kind word for Erin in the show notes page on the Organic Gardener Podcast Page and then make sure you sign up for our email list so when I announce the winner you’re notified that your comment won!Contest Ends March 21, 2017!
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Oh my goodness! I’m in love with this story and will definitely be headed to Erin’s website to get on her list as soon as I comment here. I was searching for someone to inspire me as I decided to dedicate a raised bed to cutting flowers and HERE SHE IS! Wahoo thank you to both of you for the blogs and podcast. xo
Thank for listening Kristie! If there’s anything else you’d like to learn about let me know?! I love Erin’s website so much I think you will be glad you signed up for her list! I’m so glad you like the podcast! Jackie :~)
What a lovely book and podcast! As a amateur garden and flower connoisseur, I’d love to learn from you!
Caroline! I’m so glad you like the book and podcast! I can’t wait to get my hands on my copy should be arriving any day now! If there’s anything else you’d like to learn about let me know! Jackie :~)
Erin’s book looks beautiful.
Thanks for listening Mom! Always good to know your mom is in the audience!
Loved Erin’s interview!
I’m so glad you enjoyed Erin’s interview Linda! Thanks for listening and let me know if there’s anything else you’d like to learn! See you in the Facebook group!
What a lovely story. When I was 10 or 12 I ordered seed packets and sold them to neighbors. I definitely didn’t get rich (we lived in the country and we had five neighbors) but I started growing some seeds myself and I thought it was magic.
While raising my family I always thought it important to have a garden and provide my kids with fresh vegetables.
I really like the “dipping our toe in the world” quote and I think I will make that my mantra this year.
I’ve been thinking about growing lavender for a cash crop and I’ve decided to try it this year.
Thanks for the motivation and “keep on planting”.
I’m so glad you got so many golden sees from Erin’s interview. I love the dipping our toe in the world quote too! I’m glad your thinking of trying lavender! I’d love to hear how it goes. I thought about making our challenge for 2017 to try and take something to market. Just one product. It sounds like you might be interested in that kind of challenge! Thanks for listening!
Jackie :~)
so fabulous ~ love that she promotes eliminating chemicals. journal sure looks good
Thanks for introducing me to Floret Dacia! I’m so glad I found her blog when you first told me about them ordering some of your lovely aprons!
Beautiful book and great show. Love Erin’s enthusiasm and down to earth approach. Favorite take-away? Never cut corners, and her daughter’s name – Olora!
It was a great interview and I agree Erin is very down to earth and super passionate and enthusiastic!! Thanks for commenting and entering! and most of thanks for listening! It’s always makes me feel special when you send me a little email about an episode! And to know people are really listening! I don’t always trust the numbers?! :~)))
Thank you, Erin, for showing how beautiful growing organically can be! I’m so excited about this book as I love growing flowers! At least a year ago, I actually ripped out the pages of a magazine article about your farm because they were so beautiful, I couldn’t bear to throw them away. I can’t wait to see more in the book. Congratulations!
I know Jess! Amazon said my copies shipped yesterday I can’t wait! There gardens are absolutely gorgeous. I hope to get to go there and paint someday!
Oh my gosh I am so excited about this interview!!!!! I am totally inspired by Erin’s work. She is trailblazing the idea of growing show stopping flowers locally and organically and I personally know many women who decided to follow their dreams and become local flower farmers because of Floret. I love growing dahlias in my suburban garden, and the pictures in this book are absolutely amazing! Thank you Jackie for featuring Floret Flowers on your podcast!
Thanks Basia!!! I was excited to try dahlias this year too after this interview. I don’t think we have them at our house? I was so honored to have her share her story with me. Thanks for listening and being one of those awesome inspiring guests yourself!
For the free book – I liked that she is growing sweet peas to keep their variety going and to have other sources for sweet peas. And I liked her story about growing sweet peas and when she gave them to someone they cried with joy.
I know isn’t that so sweet that they are growing sweet peas and taking over the seed saving so they don’t become extinct. It always goes to show that there are more ways to make money then just selling the plain blooms. In the flower Farmer Facebook group someone asked if you could really make money having a flower business and there were 185 encouraging comments! I can’t wait to read them all!
👍👍💚💜
I’m just so inspired!! I want to see pictures of everything she grows. I was so inspired when I listened that I’ve since planted lots of calendula, lavender and Mexican sage in and around all of my vegetable beds!! The chickens love the buds & petals & dried lavender hanging in their coop!! So many uses besides the awesome beauty. Thanks for another great podcast!!
Wow Tammy! That’s amazing you did all that already! Great to hear the use of herbs with the chickens! I’ll love that it’s beautiful and functional!
Love Erin! She is so inspiring and knowledgeable. I was surprised to learn she’s only three years older than me, because I see her as so wise. Thanks for the great interview!
April I’m so glad you enjoyed this episode! She does seem wise for her years doesn’t she? Thanks for listening!
Love love this episode of your podcast. thank you so much for interviewing Erin. I learned so much about flower gardens and am “almost” convinced to try a small area of flowers to sell in our metro area! Erin is so very inspiring.
Ah Vicki! I’m so glad you were inspired. I was thinking I should make this years challenge to just take one thing to market or at least shop at your local market and go each week. That might be something you are interested in. You might also enjoy my interviews with Jaan Martin Fortier and Pamela Lund! Both talk about the farmer’s market, Pam from a newbee standpoint and Jean Martin from a seasoned professional’s view. Thanks so much for listening!
My father and I started a garden when I was 7 and it was always one of the most important thing in my life. When I started dating my high school sweetheart in college, I developed a love for organic cut flowers from the local farmers market. Although we still live in an apartment, I’ve found a way to grow vegetables and cut flowers in our community garden. I LOVE how you never gave up on your passion. People like you will be the main drivers of the future of organic gardening. Thank you for your podcast and I can’t wait to buy your book!
Sincerely,
Josh Pratt
Wow Josh! You sound like a great boyfriend! I’m glad you keep growing vegetables and flowers even though you live in an apartment right now! I think you must be one of those great future growing millenials I love so much! I will pass your kind comments on to Erin who wrote the book and his still working on her passion. Jackie :~)
I LOVE Floret Farms & Erin .. what a great podcast! I would LOVE to WIN her book!!
I AM SO INSPIRED !!
This has been thoughts going about in my head…… I would love to have fresh flowers to put in the house…….I admire the flowers in a store yet I will not buy them…. wow what kind to grow, oh dear, what do I do HELP……..three years ago I was working a vegetable farm and the head gardener planted these flowers , it was my first experience something other than marigolds, and the beauty awed me as walked into the garden ……… I want to create that again to share with others that come to my garden………..where do I start……which ones to grow…..please don’t let this be something I end up not doing because of lack of info and end up not doing.
Erin’s book will be my guide for my first step into growing flowers. Another HUGE INSPIRATION is she does not use chemicals, neither do I.
Thank you for sharing your story. You have come into my life answering so many questions and giving me confidence .
I would love to win the book. I will have Erin’s book as my guide
Love the collecting of seeds. I WANNA LEARN !!!
Blessings
Emily
Wow Emily, I’m so glad you listened to my interview with Erin and were inspired! And glad you don’t use chemicals either … Keep on being inspired and I think you will learn a lot as I have several interviews coming up that really help you learn how to build your soil so your flowers will grow more beautiful and beneficial insects will be invited to help keep your vegetables producing more and keep the bad bugs at bay. Thanks again for listening and please let me know if there is anything else you would like to learn. If you are on Facebook I encourage you to join the Flower Farmer group as well as our Organic Gardener Podcast group we’d love to have you join! Have a great day!
Thank you… Really enjoyed this..
DROP THE CHEMICALS!! YES! My favorite part by far. If more people would go organic our world would be a much better place. Also the coming to terms with killing plants is good advice. No one is perfect right out of the gate. Just don’t get discouraged. I would love to read the book.
I appreciate Erin’s sharing what worked for them and what didn’t. It helps to hear (read) someone talking about the initial dream compared to the sustainable reality. Thank you!
I love how she grows so much on 2 acres .. inspired me to not give up on my tiny 3 acres as I start my first year growing! Your podcasts are great! Thanks!
It was great to have a guest from the PNW! Being in Portland OR, the weather and conditions are similar and relatable. Erin’s story is great – I love to hear folks stories about why they are in their business, what drives them and there experiences and learnings! I love that you asked for a garden plot each year as a kid, I guess you new what you wanted at an early age!
The layout of the book looks great from start to finish and I love when books follow and guide you through the year/seasons! Your website is great and informative; I will be perusing your seeds to purchase.
Thanks you both for a very informative and fun podcast, it was enjoyable to listen to!
Cheers,
Susan
I liked the use of other greenery (beans) , herbs, etc. – pea tendrils are really cool in arrangements!
So, I’m really obsessed with Lara Casey, and she also featured Erin’s new book. This is also the first year that we are planting our very own garden, and I’m going all organic, so I’ve been thrilled that there is a podcast such as this that exists. (This is my first comment here!).
I’m a sucker for beautiful photography and this book has that, I’m also thrilled that it encompasses all skill levels.
I enjoyed this episode, especially the part about not cutting corners. I am so excited to plant my first garden, so much so that, I don’t want to take the time to really plan! I needed to hear this and not jump the guns.
I WOULD LOVE TO WIN THIS THIS BOOK-I LOVED THIS EPISODE SO INSPIRING,I TOOK AWAY These 2 COMMENTS ALONG WITH MANY OTHERS.
#1″One of my favorite things to do is to incorporate food into bouquets-I NEVER THOUGHT ABOUT DOING THIS!!!-wow such a cool thing to do.
little current tomatoes
pear tomatoes
and herbs that have gone to seed
green beans on the stem… they looks so cool when they are tumbling out of the side
I also loved her motto,
“My favorite own motto don’t worry about making mistakes … just get your hands in there and get dirty… you’ll learn the most by making mistakes and so often what doesn’t work is what ends up teaching you the most so just get in there and try and don’t worry about killing plants because you’re gonna kill a lot of them… so just make peace with that from the beginning…”
It was reassuring to know that even someone as successful as she is ,has made mistakes along the way AND ONE NEEDS TO ACCEPT THAT AND KEEP GOING.
Thank you Jackie for this great interview and resource.I would love to read THIS BOOK.Congratulations to ERIN FOR PUBLISHING SUCH A REALLY GREAT BOOK.