Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fresh pickings

Fans of the new pluck the latest in rare plants

- KATIE VAN SYCKLE

Mike Rimland, the “plant hunter” for Costa Farms, one of the largest houseplant growers in North America, was touring a tiny nursery in Southeast Asia about five years ago when he spotted a bunch of dark purple waxy leaves he didn’t recognize.

“I’d never seen anything like it,” said Rimland, 66, whose official title is vice president for research and developmen­t. He grew up in Miami and has worked in the horticultu­re business for 45 years.

He spends about four months each year trekking through tropical regions in countries like India, Vietnam and Kenya in search of the “newest, coolest” plants that will also thrive indoors. They are intended to fill the shelves of Ikea, Walmart, Costco and Home Depot, as well as smaller garden centers around the country.

“You’re looking for a needle in a haystack,” Rimland said.

The plant he saw, the Geogenanth­us ciliatus, or geo, was commercial­ly rare. It looked “like Mars,” he said. It had slightly curled, almost black sprouts and a thick leaf that suggested it would be hard to kill — all the qualities of a hit houseplant.

Now, after years of developmen­t, the geo has arrived at stores. It recently won the coveted honor of “Best New Foliage” at the Tropical Plant Internatio­nal Expo, a top industry trade show. It is on sale at major retailers and small boutiques as far and wide as New York, Los Angeles and Des Moines, Iowa, and is being marketed with the dollar-sign-eyes of a Timothee Chalamet movie. Online, fans are beginning to gush. (“My little goth baby,” one wrote on Instagram).

Plant sales for all kinds of varieties have surged over the past few years. About 38 million households in the United States that participat­e in indoor houseplant gardening spent

about $1.67 billion in 2020, an increase of 28% from 2019, according to the 2021 National Gardening Survey.

SEEKING THE RARITIES

Many enthusiast­s, including millennial­s and Gen Zers, continue to gravitate to rare varieties with a sharper look that often sell for hundreds of dollars in online auctions. Now, mass-market growers like Costa Farms are on a mission to deliver the next “It” plant at a time when new varieties lose their novelty in a matter of months.

“The ‘It’ plant is the quest,” said Katie Dubow, the president of Garden Media Group, a public relations firm that advises companies on market trends. “Everybody wants to have it, grow it, sell it.”

People’s relationsh­ips with their plants deepened during the pandemic, industry experts say, and once-trendy varieties have started to seem dusty.

Former “It” plants like the Pilea peperomioi­des, with its coin-shaped leaves, and the fiddle leaf fig, a fixture of home design catalogs, have been bumped out of vogue. (The fiddle leaf “got a bad rap” in part because it is harder to care for than it looks, explained Christian Esguerra, an influencer who posts under the handle crazyplant­guy.) The Raven ZZ had a moment, the Philodendr­on birkin was coveted briefly, and the pink princess is on its way out.

Now, instead of one plant that everyone wants, dozens are popular. The National Garden Bureau declared 2022 the year of the peperomia, but fans are also craving alocasias, anthuriums, calatheas and hoyas of all kinds.

Trends are driven, in part, by an avid group of rare plant collectors and influencer­s who covet specific varieties the way others might prowl for sneakers, watches or whiskey. They display their collection­s with similar pride.

“You grow a big staghorn fern and people come over to your house, and are like, ‘What the heck is that thing?’” said Ryan Benoit, who co-founded the The Horticult blog, adding, “It’s like your kids got accepted to an Ivy League college; they’re doing well.”

There is also a well-establishe­d community of buyers who say they connect to their plants emotionall­y.

Maria Failla, 33, a former Broadway performer, turned to gardening after she lost her job at the start of the pandemic.

“I feel like when I got into plants a part of my heart lit up that I wasn’t even connected with,” said Failla, who runs a virtual garden society and hosts the podcast “Bloom and Grow Radio.”

The horticultu­re industry, which has long relied on the spending habits of baby boomers, has perked up at the interest — and money — from a new generation. For years, breeders have released plants with specific qualities that sell well, like maple trees that promise brighter fall foliage. By leaning into unique varieties with unusual leaves, they are applying this approach to houseplant­s, industry consultant­s say.

“I don’t just have a hydrangea. I’ve got an Endless Summer hydrangea. It blooms all summer long,” said Charles

Hall, a professor of economics and horticultu­re at Texas A&M University. “I think the houseplant category in itself is just now catching up to that phenomenon.”

DODGING THE COMPETITIO­N

Rimland was vague about exactly where he found the geo; he didn’t want to tip off the competitio­n. (As interest in plants has exploded, other growers, large and small, are also in search of new varieties to develop and sell widely.)

Rimland said he followed all local regulation­s and searched only in government-approved regions. “I’m not out climbing a mountain stealing plants that are endangered,” he said.

Before leaving Asia, Rimland shipped several cuttings — roots with a few leaves — to the United States. Costa Farms then began a series of indoor trials to make sure the geo wouldn’t die easily, turn brown, develop diseases or drop leaves. The company tested them in no-light, lowlight and low-humidity environmen­ts — the suboptimal growing conditions houseplant­s must often endure.

“We don’t need to introduce something that’s fluorescen­t purple but dies in a week,” Rimland said. “We need customer success.”

Over about four years, the company grew the supply to about 100,000 plants and distribute­d them to retailers across North America, where a small geo in a 6-inch pot is selling online for about $45.

“We are not here to supply plants at these crazy prices that you see on the internet,” Rimland said. “We’re here to supply plants to everybody that wants one at a fair and reasonable price.”

In the coming months, Costa Farms will continue to release new varieties and has teamed with the influencer­s behind Black Girls With Gardens, Mariah Grows and House Plus Plant, who are expected to do “unboxings” and ceremoniou­sly reveal new plants. Industry experts believe that by constantly feeding the market, growers will keep fans coming back.

PLANT POACHING RISES

Conservati­on groups are working to raise awareness about the link between the surging interest in rare species and an increase in plant poaching. In South Africa and Chile, authoritie­s say, there has been a rise in succulent and cactus poaching, often by people looking for a way to escape poverty.

Abby Meyer, the executive director of Botanic Gardens Conservati­on Internatio­nal U.S., said the biggest impact was on biodiversi­ty-rich, tropical zones.

“The demand in collectibl­e tropical plants as houseplant­s is directly correlated to increased plant poaching in tropical regions,” Meyer said.

It can be difficult for shoppers buying plants through social media sites to know where varieties are coming from. Meyer advised people to seek out licensed nurseries, talk to growers, ask about their sources and research the issues affecting particular varieties. Or, don’t buy them, she said, and volunteer at botanical gardens that house rare plants instead.

“If you’re interested in orchids and your local garden has an orchid collection,” Meyer said, “you can get your orchid fix at the garden, and it’s for the public good.”

 ?? (The New York Times/Vincent Tullo) ?? As consumers tire of pandemic-era monsteras and fiddle leaf figs, nurseries seek out the next blockbuste­r plant.
(The New York Times/Vincent Tullo) As consumers tire of pandemic-era monsteras and fiddle leaf figs, nurseries seek out the next blockbuste­r plant.
 ?? (The New York Times/Scott McIntyre) ?? Mike Rimland, the “plant hunter” for Costa Farms, holds a Geogenanth­us ciliatus.
(The New York Times/Scott McIntyre) Mike Rimland, the “plant hunter” for Costa Farms, holds a Geogenanth­us ciliatus.
 ?? (The New York Times/Scott McIntyre) ?? Geogenanth­us ciliatus, aka “geo” Best New Foliage honors at the recent Tropical Plant Internatio­nal Expo.
(The New York Times/Scott McIntyre) Geogenanth­us ciliatus, aka “geo” Best New Foliage honors at the recent Tropical Plant Internatio­nal Expo.
 ?? (The New York Times/Vincent Tullo) ?? Monstera dubia remains in demand, in part because certain botanical qualities make it difficult to propagate.
(The New York Times/Vincent Tullo) Monstera dubia remains in demand, in part because certain botanical qualities make it difficult to propagate.
 ?? (The New York Times/Vincent Tullo) ?? Charmed Wine is one of the latest plants to feed consumer demand for exciting varieties.
(The New York Times/Vincent Tullo) Charmed Wine is one of the latest plants to feed consumer demand for exciting varieties.
 ?? (The New York Times/Vincent Tullo) ?? Rex begonia is in demand.
(The New York Times/Vincent Tullo) Rex begonia is in demand.
 ?? (The New York Times/Vincent Tullo) ?? Maria Failla runs a virtual garden society and hosts the podcast “Bloom and Grow Radio.”
(The New York Times/Vincent Tullo) Maria Failla runs a virtual garden society and hosts the podcast “Bloom and Grow Radio.”

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