Wednesday, December 9, 2009

LOCAL, HAND-MADE SOAPS now available at the GIFT SHOP




We are proud to offer The Dahlia Farm hand-craft soaps this Christmas season here at Reynolds Flowers.

Once you have experienced the gentle, fragrant emolience of Dahlia Soaps, you will find it difficult to go back to the same old hard bar.

Made with olive oil, shea butter, and essential oils these quality soaps are an affordable luxury that will bring joy and comfort to anyone on your Christmas list. Stocking stuffer individual bars are only $5, and the stand-alone, cheerfully gift wrapped 3-pak is a wonderful value at $14.

Be sure to stop in this week and receive a free sample. You'll be merrily pleased.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Attention OAK POINT residents:


Is "15% off" music to your ears...?

Just bring in your Oak Point Gold Card and receive a 15% discount on flowers, gifts, plants & gourmet fruit baskets at REYNOLDS FLOWERS. This offer is valid on any IN-STORE, CASH & CARRY purchases (credit card & wire-service sales prohibited).

We are right around the corner and look forward to seeing you soon.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

CRANBERRY COUNTRY JOURNAL




Be sure to see us this weekend on local-access "Cranberry Country Journal" (Comcast channel 9, Verizon channels 31 & 32).

Showtimes are Friday, Saturday, and Sunday nights at 9pm, and Saturday and Sunday mornings at 10 am.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

8th INNING FLOWERS



NEW YOU-TUBE VIDEO: Massachusetts florist demonstrates a knack for floral sculptures. Flags, corporate logos, military insignia, music, Harleys, animals and other objects find representation in flowers. Featured here, Sweet Caroline's Boston Red Sox.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

The Dahlia Farm, Middleboro


Middleboro Gazette columnist and blogger Michael Maddigan, visits Middleboro's floral history this week in his "Recollecting Nemasket." Specifically featured: DAHLIAS!


One of the flower farms featured in his article is that of present-day Reynolds Flowers.


Continually cultivated since the first building of record in 1839, this site has produced sweet corn, potatoes, gladioli, seeds, herbs, blueberries, holiday crops such as Easter lilies & poinsettias, hardy mums, dent corn, and perrenial cutflowers. But it was EASTVALE FARMS (1920's-1950's) which made this site historic, when at their zenith they became the largest dahlia farm in New England.


Flower farming continues here today including even, yes, dahlias!


Be sure to read Mr. Maddigan's column (which can be linked to from this blog). His series has been one that is not only historically fascinating, but painstakingly researched and archivally unique in its focus.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Flower Couture hits runway at LA's Fashion Week
















This March, BoxEigth Studios - the company behind some of the hottest shows during LA Fashion Week - blossomed with a new hit: Flower Couture.








Yes, the power of flowers has bloomed and the high-style ensemble of orchids and flesh was ripe for the paparazzi and onlookers at fashionable Broadway and Sixth.








Pictured here are several featured designs, but don't wait for these to show up at bargain basements, these sytles are just too fresh!

Thursday, April 30, 2009

MOTHERS DAY IS MAY 10, 2009


Mothers Day (and motherhood worship) dates back to the ancient Greeks with the festival of Cybele (a mother of gods), and the celebration of Rhea (wife of the mythological Cronos). Modern American Mothers Day was reportedly conceived by Julia Ward Howe in the post-Civil War era as an homage to "the inherent pacifism of mothers." The holiday is now celebrated around the world on varying dates, but owes is basis to mostly to these initiatives. Throughout Africa, Mothers Day follows the British model and much of East Asia has now adopted the United States' version.


If you need to send flowers for this Mothers Day please visit us at: http://www.reynoldsflowers.com/. We personally deliver to Bridgewater, Carver, EastTaunton, Halifax, Lakeville, Middleboro, & Plympton, and can arrange delivery to Florida, Maine or anywhere else in the free world.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Locally grown food finds niche in Brockton area - Brockton, MA - The Enterprise




Locally grown food finds niche in Brockton area - Brockton, MA - The Enterprise: "Locally grown food finds niche in Brockton area
Demand for local produce is sprouting

Tim Correira/The Enterprise
Jim Reynolds feeds his chickens at The Dahlia Farm in Middleboro on Thursday. Reynolds, who runs a successful florist shop, is expanding and will sell eggs and produce from his 6-acre farm.




Related Links We need a diet of “real food,” Michael Pollan tells Bridgewater State audience (03/27/09)
By Kyle Alspach
ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER
Posted Mar 27, 2009 @ 11:28 PM

MIDDLEBORO — A new organic farm in Middleboro and a farmers market in Bridgewater are set to debut this year, two signs that locally grown food is a growing commodity in the region.The Dahlia Farm on Plymouth Street in Middleboro will offer organic vegetables and herbs, eggs from free-range chickens and cut flowers, said farmer Jim Reynolds.People will be able to buy “shares” of the vegetable crop this summer, entitling them to an assortment of veggies each week starting in June...

Nearly 500 people who crowded into a Bridgewater State College hall on Wednesday to hear a talk from Michael Pollan, local food advocate and author of best-sellers “The Omnivore’s Dilemma” and “In Defense of Food.”Pollan’s emphasis on eating “real food” — with little or no processing — is something that resonates with farmers such as Jim Reynolds.“People are becoming more and more aware of what exactly is in the food they’ve been eating — that just because something has an FDA approval, it doesn’t necessarily mean it’s good for you,” he said.The Dahlia Farm is located on the property of Reynolds Flowers, a business run by Reynolds’ family since the 1950s.Reynolds, 46, and his wife, Michele, will be farming the land together this year. One acre is being devoted this year to vegetables, he said.Another two acres are allotted for the farm’s 50 chickens, which are currently producing organic eggs for the Rockin K Cafe in Bridgewater.Reynolds joins several dozen other farmers in southeastern Massachusetts growing food mainly for local consumption.“There’s very much a movement of people becoming educated in what we’re eating,” he said...


Thursday, March 19, 2009

Middleboro Youth Advocates - Prom Fair 2009




See us Sunday, March 22, at Middleboro Youth Advocates 2009 "Prom Fair."




This community outreach group has been active in Middleboro for some time and we are always happy to support their worthy cause. You can visit their site directly for more information at: http://middleboroyouthadvocates.org/Prom_Fair_2009.html


Monday, March 16, 2009

Easter 2009



Easter Sunday celebrations for 2009 fall on April 12 in the western calendar (Catholic and Protestant Churches). The Eastern Orthodox Church has set the date for Easter 2009 to be 19th April.
Easter is a "floating" holiday whose main constant is that it falls 40 days after Ash Wednesday, which is the day after "Fat Tuesday" or in French, "Mardi Gras." The 40 days between Mardi Gras & Easter is called Lent - a period of fasting, sacrifice and prayer in symbolic remembrance of the Christ's sacrifice.
The float has been occurring since the Council of Nicaea in the year 325AD, when Roman Emperor Constantine I ordered the Christian leaders to set doctrine and dates of principal Christian events.
Easter (literally, to the east) is not only the Christian Resurrection, but that of older paganism as well, calling the re-birth of the Earth and spring from the depths and deaths of winter and the solstice. Not coincidentally, Easter's "float" moves around the vernal equinox.

Friday, February 20, 2009

SPRING FLOWER SHOW


Surprizing (and disappointing) as it may be the BOSTON FLOWER SHOW (a/k/a the NEW ENGLAND FLOWER SHOW) has been cancelled! Funding appears to be the main issue and if you would like to help the Mass Horticultural Society out for 2010, you can visit their site at http://www.masshort.org/New-England-Spring-Flower-Show.


The good news to all this is that The 16th Annual Rhode Island Spring Flower & Garden Show will take place THIS WEEKEND, February 19-22, 2009 at the Rhode Island Convention Center. For all information follow this link. http://www.flowershow.com/. These shows are always welcomed by winter-weary New Englanders and are well worth your support.

Monday, February 9, 2009

JORDANS FURNITURE




A big 'Thank You' is in order for Jordans Furniture, for their inclusion of some of our floral work in their 2008 catalog. As always, this company stands above the pack in their support of community (and of course, exemplary taste!). Again, thank you folks!

Monday, February 2, 2009

WHAT'S SO FUNNY ABOUT PEACE, LOVE & CARTHAMUS TINCTORIUS?




Carthamus tinctorius - or safflower - is one the oldest cultivated plants of record. Seeds have been found in pharaohs' tombs dating back at least to 2000 B.C. and safflower has been cultivated by the ancient Chinese as an oil crop and for medicinal use. In more recent centuries the flowers have been used for yellow, orange and red dyes as well as 'saffron-like' food additives. In the U.S. in the first half of the last century saffron oil was used as a high-quality paint medium. Today the oil is a readily-available cosmetic & food additive, including its use as a cooking and salad oil.




But it was not until the recent 1970's that the cut-flower industry began developing safflower as a marketable product. Through the 80', 90's and early 2000's demand has steadily increased for this hardly known, peculiar little flower. Be sure to ask for availability the next time you're looking for something a little different.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

10 Farmers Make 12 tons of Nitrogen Fertilizer Disappear.


Last year, ten Pennsylvania farmers took on AMERICAN FARMLAND TRUST's "Best Management Program Challenge" to grow their field crops using less nitrogen fertilizer than the recommended levels nitrogen fertilizer. The results of their year long experiment are good news for the environment and the wallet! In 2008, these farmers reduced a total of 24,658 pounds of nitrogen that otherwise would have been applied to their fields. Not only did these farmers remove thousands of pounds of nitrogen that could have ended up clouding the Chesapeake, they did it at a fraction of the cost of other nitrogen removal strategies—at only $2.74 per pound versus the up to $8-9 per pound it is estimated it could cost tax payers to remove the nutrient through other means. It isn’t just farmers that can make a difference; you can do your part too! Whether you live in the Mid-Atlantic or in the plains of North Dakota, water always makes its way downhill. Find out what you can do: check-out the Chesapeake Bay Foundation’s nitrogen calculator and take a challenge of your own!