Showing posts with label flower crops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flower crops. Show all posts

Thursday, May 4, 2017

The Month of May

Wake Up on the Bright Side 


The month of Nay comes from Maia, the name of a Greek Goddess.  She was identified with the Roman era goddess of fertility, Bona Dea.  Alternately, the Roman Poet Ovid said that the month of May was named for the mayors  Latin for "elders" and that June is named for the iuniores or young people.

I wonder if May is a bit late for spring awakening in Rome and so checked out its spring.  It's from early April to late June.  Wisteria is in bloom by mid April. There are azaleas and orange blossoms. Rome's rose garden starts to bloom by late April and continues to mid June with more than 1,100 roses. The cherry blossoms bloom from mid March through the first week of April.  Rome's birthday is April 21 according to the ancient tradition that it was founded in 753 BC by Romulus.


Our wisteria buds are showing their purple colour, so we can expect them to bloom in the next week or two - a beautiful combination of sight and scent.  This is a daffodil growing field on 9nth Street - I'm told it is part of the Pioneer Greenhouse operation.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Orchids in Niagara

Niagara's Winter Crop

Niagara's Crops

There are acres of greenhouses in Niagara.  Some stretch as far as you can see as you drive along the QEW or the Niagara Stone Road into Niagara-on-the-Lake.  

We're looking at the orchid 'crop' growing in the Cosmic Greenhouses, in Beamsville.  I stopped in last week to see if they would allow photography and got a quick tour.  Plant production is efficient and scientific:  The orchids we see for sale in the grocery stores and florists take 19 months to grow from tissue culture sprouts to blooming plants. They start in warm greenhouses below, where they receive water and nutrients on a rigorous schedule.  When large enough, they are moved to the next greenhouse where it is cool.  Cool temperatures are needed to make phalaenopsis (what you see here) spike and bloom. And then they are off to our houses.  While it is great to see in winter, this isn't just a winter crop.  These orchids are grown year round, with the greenhouses heated and cooled to match the growing conditions needed.
 

Our third picture is at Niagara College in the learning greenhouses of the horticultural program. The usage instructions to students include 'maintaining a clean environment and no food or drink in the greenhouse'.  It looked like a cucumber crop in this special greenhouse, and in the larger greenhouse where we are allowed to walk around, begonia seeds will sprout for this summer's gardens.