The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

While we can’t gather, flowers nurture connection­s

Florists see a surplus in sales as loved ones send bouquets to close distance.

- Carly Lewis

Three weeks ago, Julia Gray, a florist, delivered a bright bouquet of flowers to a customer in the New York City borough of Queens — spring colors, by request. Judging by the accompanyi­ng card, which

the sender had carefully dictated to Gray by telephone, a familial falling-out had taken place. The flowers were sent as an apology.

“It was this young woman, sending flowers to

her aunt,” Gray said. “She hadn’t seen her family for a year-and-a-half.” When Gray told the recipient the flowers were from her niece, her face lit up. “People are realizing that time is of the essence,” Gray said. “You can’t hold a grudge.”

As the de facto manager of Donhauser Florist, an Astoria shop opened by her great-great-grandfathe­r in 1889, Gray is used to brokering transac

tions of affection through bouquets. But the pandemic, she said, has intensifie­d the process.

“Sending flowers has always had meaning, but now it’s more serious,” Gray said. “The messages used to be short — ‘Happy birthday, love so and so.’ Now people are writing paragraphs, and they’re much more specific. I have to remind customers that it’s just a small card. If people really have a lot to say, I’ll type it out and print it.”

Spending the past 11 months in various states of lockdown has inspired many a soul-searching expedition. It has been a period of perhaps involuntar­y rumination, during which many people have had no choice but to be alone with their thoughts. And when those thoughts sometimes become softhearte­d mea culpas, florists get the call.

“I wear my counselor’s hat on a regular basis,” said John Harkins, who has owned Harkins, the Florist in New Orleans for 42 years. Harkins grew up in the floral business but earned a degree in counseling and worked as a teacher for a decade before returning to it. “I’ve had people break down crying on the phone,” he said. “I have to be infinitely patient and kind. And you know, it’s something people really appreciate you for.”

Harkins estimates that his business is up 50% compared with this time last year. “My father told me when I was a young man that the flower business is recession-proof,” he said. “He started during the second dip of the Great Depression in 1937. He said, ‘When things really get bad, a guy can’t go out and buy his wife a new car or a mink coat, but he can buy a dozen red roses and feel like a big shot.’ It’s kind of a denial of the hard times. That’s where the florist steps in.”

The flower industry’s pandemic success at the retail level has revealed our zealous, if not a little despairing, need to nurture relationsh­ips from a distance. Outside a pandemic, friends and loved ones might have congregate­d at a bar or restaurant to celebrate special occasions. Alas, in lieu of saying it in person, we’re all saying it with flowers.

And there’s an underlying sadness.

“It’s wrenching to know that the reason someone is sending flowers is because otherwise they’d be there in person,” said Whit McClure, who runs the floral design studio Whit Hazen in Los Angeles. “I get choked up thinking about that.” McClure also noted that, given the staggering number of COVID-related deaths in Los Angeles, she has been receiving a significan­t increase in condolence and sympathy orders.

“We may not be essential in a food, shelter, clothing way, but mental health is essential; feeling connected to people is essential,” McClure said. “Our job is helping people stay connected during this time.”

Gray, too, has found her flower shop a firsthand witness to the pandemic’s casualties. After handing an arrangemen­t to a griefstric­ken woman who had just lost her husband to COVID-19 several months ago, Gray broke down crying in her car.

Another of Gray’s customers, a regular, lives in Hawaii. Currently unable to return to New York, she has Gray deliver flowers to her parents’ graves at St. Michael’s Cemetery in East Elmhurst, a neighborho­od in Queens. “It’s interestin­g, she wasn’t ordering before the pandemic,” Gray said. “But now we have long discussion­s about what she wants for her mom and dad.”

Harkins has also noticed an increase in funeral orders. Because of capacity restrictio­ns on funerals, those orders often now go straight to the home of the bereaved, whereas previously they’d be sent to the funeral home. And, surprising­ly to him, “people are spending a lot of money consoling their friends when they lose a pet,” Harkins said. “Often they don’t know what to say, so what I suggest is, ‘Let’s not mention the pet and the death; let’s just say “Sending much love, ellipsis” and sign your name.’ “

More than ever, florists are on the front lines of their customers’ rawest emotions: agents of accord brought in to soothe suffering or loneliness with fragrant symbols of renewal.

“We’re getting more deliveries just to say hello and check in,” Gray said. “There’s this one couple we just started taking orders from during the pandemic. He lives in Brooklyn, and she lives in Queens; she’s taking care of her elderly mother. He sends flowers to her every two weeks — beautiful arrangemen­ts, always decadent, gorgeous long-stem roses. Had the pandemic not happened, he could have been seeing her and not sending her flowers. You should see the cards he writes. He is madly in love with her. They actually got in a fight; I think they broke up at one point. But they got back together. He kept sending flowers.”

Emily Scott, who owns Floriconve­nto Flowers in the New York City neighborho­od of Harlem, said customers and florists alike are mindful of exacerbate­d sensitivit­ies amid the pandemic. “There have been so many deaths, and that is such a touchy subject,” she said. “But whether it’s a death or a great, positive occasion like a new birth, there’s still so much love that needs to be expressed.” As well as less clear emotions: “There’s a lot of nuance that can be acknowledg­ed through flowers.”

Indeed, some of Scott’s deliveries are meant to bind ambiguous relationsh­ips, presenting the challenge of conveying intention without misleading the recipient. “I had a guy say, ‘I want to give these flowers to my girl, but she’s not really my girl.’ We have to interpret the little bits of informatio­n we get from customers in order to make sure that we’re expressing the right message.”

Scott said she’s up to the task of emotional emissary. “I feel privileged to be the liaison between the customer’s feelings and the recipient’s.”

She noted that having flowers to glance at can inspire much needed breakthrou­ghs in morale. “Even if it’s just switching out the water in a vase, that can be good for mental health,” she said. “Giving flowers to people offers them a healthy, meditative moment. That may be what pulls them out of the gutter of depression. People are sending flowers as a way of cheering people up.”

Until some blessed future day when we can gather again, the little gardens we give each other will have to suffice.

 ?? NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? Florist Julia Gray (from left), with Gladys Gray and Bill Gray of Donhauser Florists in Queens, is frequently delivering flowers nowadays as a token of apology. She says people have realized during the pandemic that they don’t want to find out it’s too late to reach out with love.
NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS Florist Julia Gray (from left), with Gladys Gray and Bill Gray of Donhauser Florists in Queens, is frequently delivering flowers nowadays as a token of apology. She says people have realized during the pandemic that they don’t want to find out it’s too late to reach out with love.
 ??  ?? Whit McClure of floral design studio Whit Hazen in L.A. says she gets choked up thinking about reasons people send flowers so often right now — namely because they can’t be there in person.
Whit McClure of floral design studio Whit Hazen in L.A. says she gets choked up thinking about reasons people send flowers so often right now — namely because they can’t be there in person.

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