Flowers
See all tips toGreenYour Flowers
Buy organic and fair trade flowers
Add
Organic flowers are grown without the use of pesticides or other chemicals. Pesticides can harm the health of people who grow flowers, as well as contaminate the soil, water, and air. Fair trade flowers are also usually grown sans chemicals, plus farm workers enjoy receive fair compensation and labor conditions.
Find it! Organic and fair trade flowers
Organic
Your best bet when looking for organic flowers is to opt for those displaying the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Organic Certification label, which guarantees that they meet specific environmental standards. Check with local florists first to see if they sell organic flowers. Other resources:
Fair trade
Check these resources for local florists with fair trade offerings:
- VeriFlora: Search for florists that offer flowers that are "certified sustainably grown."
- TransFair USA: Find Fair Trade Certified florists and importers here. Fair trade means flower farmers are encouraged to use sustainable, environmentally friendly farming methods.
If you can't find organic, biodynamic, or fair trade options in your area, look for florists that offer services nationwide. Here are a few:
1-800-flowers.com
1-800-flowers.com carries a limited selection of organic and fair trade flowers. Search in the organic gifts and natural gifts sections.California Organic Flowers (Chico, CA)
Flowers are picked daily from this organic family farm and shipped overnight anywhere in the US. Shop by price or occasion (birthdays, weddings, anniversaries). California Organic Flowers also offers a flower gift club.Diamond Organics (Moss Landing, CA)
Diamond Organics distributes organic goods, including flowers from organic farmers in California and Hawaii. Choose from seasonal varieties, such as calendula and anenomes, as well as tropical flowers, including heliconia and bird of paradise.Diamond Organics Gift Baskets
Looking for something to give to a business associate or the impossible-to-buy for but flowers just won't do? Try one of these gift baskets filled with organic wine, cheese, and a bread. Or opt for their nut and dried fruit options, or the fruit and goodies basket, depending on your recipient’s taste.Flowers by the Sea (Elk, CA)
Growers of Certified Organic and Certified Biodynamic flowers, this producer specializes in cool orchids, including Masdavallia, Cymbidium, Dendrobium, Laelia, and Epidendrum. Flowers by the Sea also grows and ships produce and fruit.ManicOrganicsFlowers.com (Lawrenceville, GA)
Offering a wide range of organic flowers, including lilies and roses. This grower also has a selection of organic fruit baskets.Organic Bouquet flowers
Organic Bouquet ships flowers nationwide that are certified both by the USDA and by Veriflora. Organic Bouquet also offers organic chocolates and other gourmet food items, as well as a monthly gift club. Earn Eco-Points on all orders for use toward future purchases.Sam's Club fair trade flowers
Sam's carries a small selection of Fair Trade Certified roses, carnations, and personal bouquets. Flowers are available for shipping across the US.
Before you buy
Choosing organic or fair trade flowers may set you back a little more than non-certified bouquets because the cost of growing these flowers is slightly higher. Premiums are also sometimes added, too, which are used for community development projects in flower farming communities.
Buying organic and fair trade flowers helps you go green because…
- The flowers are grown in natural ways that don't harm the environment or your health.
- Organic farming combats global warming through carbon sequestration.
- Fair trade farming supports earth-friendly, often organic practices that are safer for you and those laboring to bring blossoms to your table.
Worldwide, cut flowers are a $40 billion industry. Americans spend about $6.2 billion on them annually, accounting for 4 billion stems per year. More than 70 percent are imported from Latin America (mainly from Colombia and Ecuador).[1]
Because these flowers must enter the country bug- and fungus-free, farmers often saturate the flowers with pesticides and other chemicals, many of which are banned or restricted in the US. Unfortunately, flower imports are not inspected for pesticide residues because they are not food products. As a result, these chemicals don't stay put, but often wash off plants and through soil, blow across landscapes, and enter the air through evaporation. Once chemicals leak into the groundwater and soil, they can become part of the food chain and passed on to other animals. They can also adversely affect pollinators, including bees.
Organic benefits
Growing flowers organically avoids the use of these pesticides and may also be key in fighting global climate change. During a 23-season study of conventional versus organic farming methods, the Rodale Institute discovered that organic farming combats global warming through carbon sequestration. In agricultural applications, the more organic matter that is retained in the soil, the more carbon is sequestered. While conventional farming depletes organic matter through the use of chemical fertilizers, organic farming uses animal manure and cover crops, which actually build soil organic matter.
Organic farming further reduces atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) by using 37 percent fewer fossil fuels than conventional farming.[2] The Rodale Institute estimates that if all 160 million acres of corn and soybean farmland in the US were switched to organic farming methods, it would be equivalent to removing 58.7 million cars from the road, and would satisfy 73 percent of the proposed US Kyoto targets for CO2 reduction.[3] Even with these eco-benefits, only 6 percent of flowers sold in the US are certified as eco-friendly and socially responsible.[1]
Beyond organic?
The marriage of pesticide-free farming and astrology may strike some floral fans as arcane, but those who practice biodynamic—short for "biologically dynamic"—agriculture praise the practice for going "beyond organic." Based on the writings of Austrian philosopher Rudolf Steiner, biodynamic agriculture predates organic practices by about 20 years. Steiner believed that chemical pesticides and fertilizers were not only detrimental to the quality of crops, but also a sign of a spiritually absent farmer who failed to align him or herself with the cosmos. In its essence, biodynamic farming is all about ecological harmony between the crop, the farmer, and other organisms within the ecosystem.
Biodynamic crops are not regulated or certified by the USDA but by independent biodynamic agencies. Demeter International (headquartered in Brussels) is the global biodynamic certifier with a US branch based in Oregon.
Fair trade and flowers
Among the many challenges that South American and African flower workers face (including poverty wages and sexual harrassment), health-related problems rank high. Chemicals are sprayed on flower crops in enclosed, unventilated tents, making it difficult for workers to avoid inhaling or becoming covered in the stuff. According to a 2002 study conducted by the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), worker exposure to pesticides was highest in greenhouses, where up to 127 different chemicals are used, three classed as extremely toxic.[4]
A United Nations study found that 60 percent of workers on flower farms in Ecuador, many of whom were children, suffered from pesticide poisoning, with symptoms such as dizziness and blurred vision.[5] A full two-thirds of Colombian flower laborers exhibit comparable illnesses, including impaired vision, neurological problems, and disproportionately high numbers of still births.[6] Children born to mothers laboring on flower farms are nearly 50 percent more likely to have been exposed to organophosphate pesticides in the womb, resulting in higher blood pressure and poorer spatial ability.[7]
Fragrant winds of change
VeriFlora, working with Scientific Certification Systems (SCS), partners with farmers to ensure environmental sustainability, social and economic sustainability, and product integrity. In particular, the groups work toward organic growing standards, strict water and energy conservation policies, and fair labor policies. They were also the first to provide a fair trade label for fresh cut flowers and potted plants and have been growing steadily.
Fair Trade Certified flowers are a recent addition to TransFair’s growing list of products, including coffee, tea, cocoa, and more. The certification process focuses on fair wages and safe working conditions, vacation and sick leave, and community development. TransFair also encourages healthy environmental practices, including limited pesticide use, conservation of water, treatment of wastewater, and protection of ecosystems. Though not currently certified organic, the group is working to phase out as many agrochemicals as possible.
Glossary
- carbon sequestration: The process by which carbon is captured (in the form of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas) from the atmosphere and incorporated into soil, ocean, and plant matter.
External links
- Organic Consumers Association
- The Ethicurean - Biodymanic vs. organic
- OrganicBouquet - Why Buy Organic Flowers?
- The Nibble - Organic vs. Biodynamic Agriculture
- US Department of Agriculture National Organic Program
Footnotes
- AmyStewart.com - Flower Confidential: The Good, the Bad, and the Beautiful in the Business of Flowers
- Straus Communications - Organic Farming Sequesters Atmospheric Carbon and Nutrients in Soils: The Rodale Institute Farming Systems Trial® Findings
- The New Farm - Organic farming combats global warming … big time
- Organic Consumers Association - Why Buy Organic Flowers for Valentine's Day & Everyday
- Time Magazine - Guilt-Free Valentines?
- AlterNet - Unhealthy Flowers: Why Buying Organic Should Not End With Your Food
- The Green Guide - Rose, Art Thou Sick?


Comments
Share Your Comments