What I love about this video is seeing the bundles of each flower dried. Much easier to know the end product this way rather than in a mixed bouquet of dried flowers. As someone who has only being selling dahlia flowers for three years and potted dafs/tulips for one year, I realized I needed to fill the gap between May and July, ND if the flowers I choose to fill the gap dry beautifully, the season keeps going. This is a great way to make use of my small city 1/4 acre lot that includes a house. I already doubled down on the daf/tulip pots with the dahlias by sinking the bulb pots into the spots the dahlias get planted once the pots are lifted. Two seasons out of one spot, the same could happen by growing flowers that dry well in the other months. (All of which will have to replace my backyard food garden as the current turn around happens in the front yard).
Great video.... would be nice to also review for us...how and when you pick the flowers and the drying process of temps too. this is great information, love you guys!
Thank you! Love your video, so helpful. Will they grow in Zone 10a in Northern California? Where can we buy these seeds to grow? Do you sell any dry flowers to ship to California?
How are dried flowers usually priced? More expensive or less expensive than fresh? And do you typically sell these at the end of the season fall/winter or all year round? Those are gorgeous!
What I love about this video is seeing the bundles of each flower dried. Much easier to know the end product this way rather than in a mixed bouquet of dried flowers. As someone who has only being selling dahlia flowers for three years and potted dafs/tulips for one year, I realized I needed to fill the gap between May and July, ND if the flowers I choose to fill the gap dry beautifully, the season keeps going. This is a great way to make use of my small city 1/4 acre lot that includes a house. I already doubled down on the daf/tulip pots with the dahlias by sinking the bulb pots into the spots the dahlias get planted once the pots are lifted. Two seasons out of one spot, the same could happen by growing flowers that dry well in the other months. (All of which will have to replace my backyard food garden as the current turn around happens in the front yard).
Can I just comment and say that I love how the both of you constantly look at one another while the other is speaking 🥰 love it! Happy new year!
🤗
@@PepperHarrow Greetings from your neighbor dealing with frigid temps at the moment in Minnesota 😁!
@@Midwestmama612 Greetings! And definitely brrr 🥶 right now.
I never thought about drying marigolds. Hmmm.
Thanks for the fun video! I’m going to add Immobium to my dried section next year!
So beautiful 😍
The flowers look wonderful. I wish my dried flowers this year had kept their colour as well as yours did.
Very nice 💞 Well done ✅
Thanks... beautiful...
#1 fan from Pittsburgh 🌻
Great video.... would be nice to also review for us...how and when you pick the flowers and the drying process of temps too. this is great information, love you guys!
sending love from the Bahamas
Thank you! Love your video, so helpful. Will they grow in Zone 10a in Northern California?
Where can we buy these seeds to grow? Do you sell any dry flowers to ship to California?
How are dried flowers usually priced? More expensive or less expensive than fresh? And do you typically sell these at the end of the season fall/winter or all year round? Those are gorgeous!
Priced equally as our fresh cuts. We sell them all year
@@PepperHarrow Thanks! I always wondered that. It's amazing how well the color stays!
@@PepperHarrow Thanks! I always wondered that. It's amazing how well the color stays!
Great video! Thanks! How about gomphrena?
They’re very nice too!
I smashed..lol Great video guys.
🇨🇦 can you clarify please . Do you wrap them in the paper and then dry them?
Hello! We tried them first and then wrap them in paper
Hi dears u both wonderfull job i am also very intrested u wellcome any time
Ruffle??? LOL