Florist Trends
  • Home
  • News

    Stars of the industry honored at SAF Phoenix 2023

    Designing a Table for Two in the Sea for the World Cup

    Harmony Harvest Farm Hosts Field to Vase Dinner

    Proflora is Back! | Florists’ Review

    Modern Design Techniques from AIFD 2023 Symposium

    AFE announces Upcoming Friends of Floral Reception at SAF

    Proflora celebrating it’s 30th anniversary

    AIFD Symposium “Grow” was Blooming in Chicago last week

    Fleurs De Villes Arrives in San Fransisco with its ‘Pride’ Show

  • Business
  • Industry
  • Floral Events
  • Wedding
  • Party Decor
  • Sympathy
  • Home
  • News

    Stars of the industry honored at SAF Phoenix 2023

    Designing a Table for Two in the Sea for the World Cup

    Harmony Harvest Farm Hosts Field to Vase Dinner

    Proflora is Back! | Florists’ Review

    Modern Design Techniques from AIFD 2023 Symposium

    AFE announces Upcoming Friends of Floral Reception at SAF

    Proflora celebrating it’s 30th anniversary

    AIFD Symposium “Grow” was Blooming in Chicago last week

    Fleurs De Villes Arrives in San Fransisco with its ‘Pride’ Show

  • Business
  • Industry
  • Floral Events
  • Wedding
  • Party Decor
  • Sympathy
No Result
View All Result
Florist Trends
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Climate change affecting farmers as some struggle, and some reap the benefits of warmer temperatures

August 23, 2023
in News
0 0

Flats of pansies — a cool-weather-loving little gem of a flower that thrives here mainly in spring — are popping up in garden centers in the Northeast. It must be April. Think again.

Garden center managers, along with farmers, landscapers, and plants, are feeling and dealing with the creeping effects of extreme and erratic weather in Rhode Island. One effect, among many, is that autumn stays warmer much later into the year, allowing a second harvest of cool-weather crops between the end of summer and the start of winter. That includes starting a new pansy garden in September, something much more common in, say, the front yards of North Carolina.

For flower lovers, a sadder side of the coin is the increasing scarcity of summer of the blazing blue mophead hydrangeas. A warm spell in mid-winter prods the flower buds to pop out of their dormant state. When the warm days are followed by a quick reversal to cold temperatures, the buds are killed, resulting in no flowers the following summer. The climate of the upper South is coming our way in the future, and plants in our area are feeling it. Even Rhode Island chickens are dying from the heat on the trip from the farm to the processing facility. Rebecca Brown, chair of the department of plant science and entomology at the University of Rhode Island, said climate change is having two main effects in Rhode Island: on weather and plants and the businesses that depend on them.

The first is erratic changes in weather patterns, sometimes sending temperatures and precipitation way off the average, that place great stress on plants, sometimes killing them or at least stunting their growth. New England has always had variable weather, but the swings are getting much more extreme, Brown said. Dry times are drier; wet times are wetter; warm spells are warmer; cold snaps are colder.

Read more at ecori.org

Related Posts

News

Tulip Experience voted ‘Best Hidden Gem of the Netherlands’

September 24, 2023
News

GlobalGAP prepares the industry for integrated farm assurance version 6

September 24, 2023
News

Nigeria: Empowering youths for self-sufficiency through horticulture

September 24, 2023
News

Royal Brinkman and Empas extend partnership

September 24, 2023
News

Nigeria: Growers eye hibiscus farming as profitable venture

September 24, 2023
News

Dümmen Orange Plant Scientist Receives 2023 Paul Ecke Jr. Award from San Diego Botanic Garden

September 24, 2023
Leave Comment

Popular

  • African flower exports bloom along with rest of the world

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Certis Belchim partners with Clever BioScience

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Voting now open for National Garden Bureau’s 2023 Therapeutic Garden Grant

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • “The first online plant-based marketplace connecting buyers with sellers”

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Crayola and Mrs. Bloom launch Crayola Flowers

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • US (NH): Wholesale plant nursery to install dynamic LEDs

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Navigate

  • About
  • Editorial Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

Recent Stories

Tulip Experience voted ‘Best Hidden Gem of the Netherlands’

September 24, 2023

GlobalGAP prepares the industry for integrated farm assurance version 6

September 24, 2023

Browse by Sections

  • Floral Events
  • News
  • Sympathy
  • trending
  • Uncategorized
  • Wedding

Copyright © All rights reserved | Florist Trends.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Industry
  • Floral Events
  • Wedding
  • Party Decor
  • Sympathy

Copyright © All rights reserved | Florist Trends.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In