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- Utah Flower Farm Feature; Ali Harrison of Paradise Valley Orchard
We are so excited to get to know our members better, to hear their stories, and watch their growth and triumphs. Ali of Paradise Valley Orchard is an amazing farmer and person whom we greatly admire. We are so excited to feature her in todayās newsletter so we can ask her the questions we always wanted to and learn a little more about her. So read on to learn about Ali, how she got started, what keeps her going, and try to imagine what two alpacas in a Subaru look like.
- Fabulous Filler for Fantastic Bouquets
Let's take a moment and define what makes a fabulous filler. If focal flowers are all about being the star, then fillers are the supporting cast. They should protect, surround, and enhance the focal flower in a bouquet. The best fillers are bulky without being unwieldy, and most importantly, prolific. Nothing is better than a small patch of plants filling buckets for weeks on end. Hereās a list of my favorite fillers throughout the growing season. The months I list them for when they are ready on my 6B zone farm in the Salt Lake Valley, where our average last frost date is in mid-May. For the sake of simplicity, I am listing foliage and flowering fillers.
- Ongoing Cut Flower Research at USU
Utah State Universityās research on cut flower production is ramping up. About a year ago, I started the USU Small Farms lab, where we focus on tailoring cut flower production to Utah growing conditions, as well as testing environmentally responsible farming practices. My background is in soil physics, so researching production schedules, season extension, temperature manipulation, plant nutrient management, and water conservation is right up my alley. Itās particularly exciting to be working in Utah because the growing conditions here are just about opposite from the typical places where cut flowers are grown: we have different soil, water, air, sunlight, temperatures, precipitation, growing season length, and winter conditions ā from a plantās perspective, thatās basically everything. Before I arrived at USU, cut flower research had already started to pop on the university farm because of Maegen Lewis, an undergraduate student at the time. She has a true passion for cut flowers and Iām incredibly fortunate that sheās now a graduate student in my lab, where she manages most of the research and undergraduate crew. Hereās a preview of our current studies:



