This article is simply to help the
consumer understand what drives prices up at Valentines day (and no, it's not because florists are evil, greedy, business owners) and why there is a
price gap between big retailers and smaller family owned businesses.
According to Society of American Florists (2007), 214 million roses are produced to fill the demand in the US alone. Everything starts with supply and demand. Demand in February goes up for red roses and the supply must meet that demand
Growers do not plant more rose crops for this holiday. Starting
in November/December, growers pinch back,
literally “throwing away “ immature roses to encourage plant to bloom in
February. Labor /equipment costs triple/quadruple at harvest time.
Airlines: flights are full of boxed roses from SA to Miami,
but empty or near empty return flights, airlines charge round trip fares to
recoup the loss on return flight, so growers are paying roundtrip freight.When you order from national companies, your tax dollars are not being spent locally. They are surcharging you, promising a price, then turning around and calling a local florist to fill order as they are just “order gatherers” and not actual flower shops.
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