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gardenerzone4

Thinking of selling Limelight hydrangeas

gardenerzone4
12 years ago

I'm not a flower farmer, but I'd like to sell some of my Limelight hydrangea flowers in future years. I have a hedge of 75 Limelights along the fence of my entire property. This is their 2nd season in the ground, and they are already 4-5' tall. In July, they burst into bloom, and the blooms persist into spring, when I deadhead them while pruning.

I never thought that Limelights made for good cut flowers until this year. In the past, I only cut fully open panicles that had already turned white, and those bouquets shed the little button eye that's in the middle of every floret within days, creating a big mess on tables. Then this year I decided to cut a few still in the green stage--with 1/2-2/3 florets open but still light green. Wow what a difference that made. the flowers retained their green color and didn't shed at all.

So that got me thinking, if I were to cut Limelight flowers in July just as they're starting to open, couldn't I maybe sell them to local florists? I found some info on this forum that hydrangeas sell for $2.50-$3.00 per stem. Some of my largest Limelight panicles are a foot tall and 8 inches wide. I could see them meriting this price in the Midwest, where I live. And I have literally thousands of blooms when the hedge is in bloom--it's a stunning sight--though I wouldn't sell all of my flowers, only the largest ones maybe.

Anyway, what do you think of my idea? Is it realistic to think that florists may want to buy my Limelights? Does anyone here have experience selling Limelight to florists? How do you approach them to make a sale? Do I try to arrange it in advance or just cut a bunch of Limelight stems next July and go door to door?

Comments (5)

  • grannymarsh
    12 years ago

    Take a bouquet of your hydrangeas, the very best ones-with long stems, 2' perhaps, take a deep breath and walk into every florist in town, offering them as a gift. Be sure to have some sort of business card, so that they may call you back. That's how I got my start selling dahlias (have now branched out into other flowers). One florist was down-right rude, the other 3 jumped up and down, they love buying local flowers. Mine sell for $1.00 a stem, at this time of year there is a glut of them. I also dry the left-overs, to sell in the off season. win-win.
    Go for it, what do you have to lose ??

  • gardenerzone4
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Grannymarsh, thanks so much for responding! How many stems in the bouquet would you leave with each florist? Do you ask them if they want to buy right when you give them the gift, or do you wait for a call back? I'm wondering b/c the hydrangeas flowers morph from unopened to fully opened within a couple weeks, and I wouldn't cut more unless I had a commitment to buy. The longer it takes a florist to call, the more likely that the biggest flowers would have gone past that appealing lime stage, rendering them no good as cut flowers. The plants do keep flowering but subsequent flowers are much smaller (like 1/3 of the size).

    Do I cut all the giant flowers that I can afford to sell and refrigerate on the off chance that someone wants to buy? (I don't even have refrigeration space!) Or do I tell florists that if they want the flowers, I would need to hear back within 3 days so I can cut more? Or do I say, these are available next year at exactly this time, if you want them, preorder with me? I've never sold any flowers of any kind, but would love to help my beloved Limelights earn their keep :-) so your kind assistance is much appreciated.

  • l_james
    12 years ago

    I would start small. That way your mistakes are small. It might take a few years to build a relationship inorder to sell all the flowers you can produce.

  • grannymarsh
    12 years ago

    10 in a bunch. This is no time to be cheap/stingy. If that seems too large , go with 5. Get yourself a book that explains, how and when to cut stems & how to treat them after harvest. Different species require different methods. I do not have refrigeration, instead utilize my basement & garage.
    Hand them the bouquet, emphasize that it is a gift and tell them that you will be selling them. "Here is my card, please call me when you need more."

  • all_bout_flowers
    12 years ago

    Wow! How exciting to have so many hydrangeas. You must not have deer? Anyway, I am a flower farmer and I agree about building a clientele. Are there any other flowers you have that bloom before the beautiful hygrangeas that might get you in the door with some of these florists? How about putting a little stand in front of your house and selling? Around here that's what everyone does. Or asking around at some restaurants or coffee shops you go to if they want to trade some beautiful flowers for a latte?

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