Richmond poinsettia grower last of a dying breed - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 18, 2024, 02:37 AM | Calgary | -0.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Richmond poinsettia grower last of a dying breed

They're not easy plants to grow, and cheap imports have driven most local producers out of the market. But for Richmond Nursery's Peter Rofner, poinsettias are in the blood.

Homegrown plants up against stiff competition from big box imports

Peter Rofner's family has been growing poinsettias in Ottawa since the 1970s. (Roger Dubois/CBC)

"My accountant begs me not to grow them," jokesPeter Rofner, surrounded by rows of brilliant poinsettias at his Ottawa-area greenhouse.

Rofnerand his staff of poinsettia experts are the last Ottawa-area growers ofEuphorbiapulcherrima.

Though he struggles to turn a profit bringing what he calls"the most hated crop in Ontario" to bloom, the man behind Richmond Nursery has no plans to stop cultivating the vibrant shrubs.

This holiday season, a sprawling crop of 27 varietals nearly 10,000 plants covering more than 20,000 square feet is indeed blooming inside his Richmond-area greenhouse.

Winter Rose Red,Celebration, Holly Point,Tri-Color, Marble, Ice Punch, and Enduring Pink are justa few of the varieties flowering now.

'They're just fussy'

Though he's proud to be the last commercial poinsettia grower in the Ottawa Valley, Rofner admits it's not an easy plant to love.
Richmond Nursery is the last commercial grower of poinsettias in the Ottawa area, cultivating about 10,000 plants annually. (Roger Dubois/CBC)

In addition to being highly susceptible to disease, the unique light-sensitivity of the plant adds another layer of complexity for the grower. Light, heat and CO2levels must be carefully regulated in order for the poinsettias to bloom and look their most festive in the weeks leading up to Christmas.

"Then there's a lot of problems with bugs, especially in southern Ontario. They're just fussy," Rofner said.

But the biggest factor weeding out local poinsettiagrowers has been globalizationand its effect onthe price of the once-rare holiday flower, now on display at the cash registers of many big box outlets.

Big box plants stressed

Like many of the goods sold at those retailers, thepoinsettias are producedthousands of kilometresaway, where labour is cheap and temperatures are suitable for growing.

When you grow a plant and you love it, it's hard to let go.- Peter Rofner

What many consumers may not know is that during shipping, the plants poison themselves with ethylene gas and are already severely stressed by the time they're purchased.Because theydon't have long to live, they're priced accordingly, and consumers grow used to the low cost.

"Just that nature of globalization, where it's cheaper to ship than to grow it in a cooler climate, has made it a short-lived, disposable plant, when it really shouldn't be that way," said Rofner.

Each July, Rofner's family starts with about 10,000 poinsettias cuttings from Mexico,GuatemalaandEthiopia. But after factoring in the cost of heating the operation, pruning the plants and dealing with the odd disease outbreak, there's not much profit left in an Ottawa poinsettia crop.

Stiff competition

When mature, the vast majority of the Richmond Nursery crop is sold at wholesale prices to community groups such as churches, hockey teams and schools. Rofner's retail price for a fully-grown plant is $42.99. Some local retailers are selling imported poinsettias for nearly half that price.

Despite the stiff competition, Rofner doesn't planto abandon his poinsettia business any time soon.

For one thing, it's a family tradition: Rofnercan remember when his parents began growing the holiday flower in heated hoop houses in the family's back yard in the 1970s. Now the business keepssix people employed in the lead-up to Christmas, when most other garden centres have shut their doorsfor winter.

"We love doing it. If it's in your blood, it's in your blood. You just can't stop," he said. "When you grow a plant and you love it, it's hard to let go."
Some of the 27 varieties of poinsettia cultivated at Richmond Nursery. (Roger Dubois/CBC)