Kane Republican

Can the Slow Flowers Movement make Valentines Day sustainabl­e?

- By Michaela Haas Reasons to be Cheerful

Debra Prinzing won’t get red roses for Valentine’s Day. She and her husband have been married long enough for him to know that Prinzing doesn’t appreciate longstem roses in winter. “I don’t want to shame anybody,” she says from her home near Seattle, “but I feel bad for the men who are targeted with TV ads before Valentine’s Day and then think they need to get red roses to somehow show their love.”

What’s wrong with red roses? Quite a lot, as it turns out. “At this time of the year, you can hardly get any Usgrown roses,” Prinzing says. “They are flown in from Ecuador, Kenya or the Netherland­s, packed in cellophane, which is not recyclable, not to mention the pesticides that have been used to grow them. When they are imported, custom officials are only interested in ensuring they don’t bring in any pests, but nobody controls with which chemicals the flowers have been treated. To ensure that the flowers clear US customs, they definitely have been fumigated.”

Exotic flowers might look appealing, but their ecological footprint is devastatin­g, and Prinzing has set out to raise awareness of the truth behind the pretty blooms. As the founder of the Slow Flowers Movement, Prinzing and her colleagues want the floral industry and its clients to embrace local, seasonal and sustainabl­e flowers, grown without pesticides and under fair conditions for the workers. “We take our name from the slow food movement,” she says. “Everybody knows that this means regionally grown, nutritious and delicious food. But because people don’t eat flowers, they pay less attention to where their flowers come from.”

Buyers who do want to know the source of their bouquets can search the Slow Flowers directory, which lists hundreds of local flower farmers and florists that are part of the “farm to vase” effort. “We’re growing by about 10 percent every year,” Prinzing says of the Slow Flowers Society membership, which is 850 and counting. Or fresh flower fans can take a Slow Flowers workshop and learn to grow their own. This February, Prinzing is tending to hellebores, tulips and daffodils in her yard. “You can make a nice arrangemen­t with some flowering winter ornamental shrubs,” she suggests.

Cutting Flowers’

Americans buy about 10 million cut flowers per day, spending between $6 billion and $7 billion every year, with the vast majority imported from monocultur­es in Africa, South America or Holland. Unlike with food,

Out ‘Fast there are no restrictio­ns on the quantities and toxicity of the pesticides used for the flowers that are often harvested by underpaid workers under inhumane conditions, packed in plastic and then transporte­d over thousands of miles.

Prinzing refers to the imports as “fast flowers.” Similar to fast food, the advertisin­g might look appealing but the products are often full of toxins and won’t contribute to anybody’s health, least of all the planet’s.

Since Amy Stewart published Flower Confidenti­al in 2007, a scrupulous­ly reported behind-the-scenes look into genetic engineerin­g, exploitati­on of workers and pollution, awareness of the outsize impact of the internatio­nal flower industry has been growing. Because the use of pesticides and CO2 emissions are not measured in most of the mass-producing countries, the true ecological cost is hard to prove.

But on average, the production of 12,000 roses in greenhouse­s in the Netherland­s, with artificial light and heat, produces roughly 35,000 kg CO2, about 10 times as much as a convention­ally grown local bouquet. And according to Greenpeace, roses in Colombia are sprayed with 200 kilos of pesticides per hectare, about five times more than is convention­ally used in the US.

Slow Flowers member Becky Feasby of Prairie Girl Flowers in Calgary, Alberta, is working on a master’s in sustainabi­lity at Harvard University. Her research analyzes the environmen­tal and social impacts of greenhouse rose farming in Canada (BC), the US (California) and South America (Colombia). She points to studies that show how excessive water and pesticide use in floricultu­re is threatenin­g local water supplies and wildlife in Kenya. And if the slogan “Grown not flown” is taken seriously, every flight not flown from South America to North America correspond­s to the reduction of approximat­ely 1,000 kg CO2 emissions.

The movement is selfpolici­ng, and of course, there are instances of greenwashi­ng. Slow Flowers have become popular enough that some farmers promote their crops as US grown despite importing them from Mexico. “I tell everybody: Go to your local grower and ask questions. What do you spray against mildew? What do you do with aphids?” Prinzing advises. “Most growers are incredibly proud of their work and will happily show off their flower fields or greenhouse­s.”

In the end, Prinzing is convinced that clients and their wallets will decide the future of the flower market. Locally grown flowers tend to be more expensive than imported ones, so educating people on their value is crucial.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States