The Secrets Behind Your Flowers
Chances are the bouquet you're about to buy came from Colombia. What's behind the blooms?
- By John McQuaid
- Photographs by Ivan Kashinsky
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
More than 100,000 people—many displaced by Colombia’s guerrilla wars and rural poverty—labor in greenhouses spread across the savanna. Seen from an airplane, the greenhouses form geometric gray-and-white patterns reminiscent of an Escher drawing. Up close, they turn out to be bare-bones structures of plastic sheeting stapled to wooden frames. But the low-rent look is deceptive; the operations are highly sophisticated.
At a farm called M.G. Consultores, I stood on a platform above a sprawling assembly line where about 320 workers (triple the usual number—this was the run-up to Mother’s Day), most of them women, were arrayed along two long conveyor belts with 14 parallel rows of workstations on either side. The work was divided into many small, discrete tasks—measuring, cutting, bunching—before neat bundles appeared on the belt, which were then dunked in a foamy antifungal solution and boxed. Latin pop music reverberated off the corrugated metal walls. The workers were handling 300,000 rose blooms a day.
Most flowers grown in Colombia are bred in European labs, especially Dutch labs, which ship seedlings and cuttings to growers. A single gerbera plant, for instance, can last several years and produce hundreds of blooms, each one taking 8 to 12 weeks to mature. Growers change colors constantly, rotating new plants in depending on the season or consumer mood. “The tendency now is monochromatic, purple on purple,” said Catalina Mojica, who works for M.G. Consultores on labor and environmental sustainability issues. “We are two years behind fashion—usually European fashion.” Indeed, two years earlier, several top European clothing designers had featured purple in their lines.
Not so long ago, Americans got their flowers from neighborhood florists, who bought blooms grown on U.S. farms. Florists crafted bouquets and arrangements to order. They still do, of course, but this approach seems increasingly quaint. These days, the bouquets that many Americans buy, typically at supermarkets, are grown, assembled and packaged overseas. At the C.I. Agroindustria del Riofrío farm, adjacent to M.G. Consultores, dozens of bouquet assemblers were nearly swallowed up by bulging piles of gerberas, alstroemeria and sprigs of baby’s breath, all to be precisely arranged and bundled in zebra-striped plastic wrap.
Adjacent to the assembly line were spacious storerooms kept at about 34 degrees Fahrenheit. It’s no understatement to say the entire flower industry depends on that number. Selling flowers is, at bottom, an attempt to outwit death, and near-freezing temperatures can delay the inevitable. Cut a flower, and its ability to photosynthesize food from light, carbon dioxide and water soon ceases. Stored food is depleted and the flower wilts. Putting flowers in water slows that process, but only cold temperatures can arrest it for weeks at a time. It took the development of “cold chains”—refrigerated warehouses and trucks every point along the way—to ensure that flowers remain in suspended animation from farm to store.
In the cold rooms, boxes containing flowers are attached to refrigeration units that infuse them with chilled air. Then they’re stacked on pallets, which are wrapped in plastic and loaded onto trucks and driven to Miami-bound planes. (The Queen’s Flowers Corporation, one of the top importers in Miami, receives 3,000 boxes of Colombian blooms, or five tractor-trailers’ worth, on a typical day. And its shipments multiply three times during busy seasons.) It takes about 48 hours for flowers to get from a field in Colombia to a warehouse in the United States, and one or two more days to reach a retailer.
This industrial machine has been assembled at some cost. As the flower business grew, researchers for labor and environmental organizations documented the sorts of problems that typify developing economies. From the beginning, the majority of the tens of thousands of job-seekers who migrated to the savanna were women, and many of them were single mothers. Most workers made the minimum wage, which is now about $250 per month. Many of them reported sexual harassment by male bosses; working long hours without breaks; and repetitive stress injuries with no employer-provided treatment or time off. As recently as 1994, a Colombian sociologist found children as young as 9 working in greenhouses on Saturdays, and children 11 and up working 46-hour weeks in almost all areas of the farms.
A 1981 survey of almost 9,000 flower workers by scientists from Colombia, France and Britain found that the work had exposed people to as many as 127 different chemicals, mostly fungicides and pesticides. (One incentive to use pesticides: the U.S. Department of Agriculture checks imported flowers for insects, but not for chemical residues.) A 1990 study by Colombia’s National Institute of Health (NIH) suggested that pregnant Colombian flower workers exposed to pesticides might have higher rates of miscarriages, premature births and babies with congenital defects.
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Comments (22)
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very nice
Posted by diganto on November 26,2012 | 10:28 AM
Innovation is key to any great achievement in life. Many of know so much about flowers, but never realized the economic value of it. Thanks for this post, cause its really inspiring!
Posted by Princewill Ejikeme on November 14,2012 | 03:41 AM
I thought this was a very informative article. I've participated in online advocacy for organic flower growing because it is better for the environment, but I had no idea how important these changes really are for the workers. Thank you.
Posted by Lynn Fried on September 28,2011 | 08:58 PM
While I feel for the plight of Columbian workers, I would like to point out that many workers in these neighborhood flower shops are single mothers making minumum wage as well. And health insurance benefits? Forget about it!
They work long hours hand arranging each design & trying to please each & every customer. Premade bouquets are fine on occasion but who is going to deliver flowers to your wife at work on your anniversary or your co-worker's mothers funeral out of state on a Sunday when these "increasingly quaint" local florists have all gone out of business?
Posted by Patricia Swick on August 21,2011 | 08:35 AM
Reading the comments on this article makes me proud to be part of the development team bringing an entirely new and disruptive technology to market. Branded as Vivafresh, it has potential to exert a positive influence on the health and well-being of everyone associated with Floriculture, not only in Columbia, but worldwide. Freshening 'agents' are no longer needed. Many of the other chemical agents currently used may also become obsolete. Vivafresh Technology extends the post-harvest fresh handling time for cut flowers by a factor of up to 10 or more. It's based on meticulous environment control, not chemicals. Using nothing but clean air, fresh water, and sealed chambers with automated controls, Vivafresh induces dormancy until it's time for the flowers to wake up and go to work helping people express the feelings in their hearts. The impact on the Floriculture industry's economics is expected to be be huge. However, what excites me more than the financial impact is how Vivafresh is entirely natural and USDA organic-compliant. It can help improve health and safety for everyone who grows, transports, handles, or sells cut flowers. My hope is that Floriculturists will maximize the human benefits as they acquire and deploy this stunning scientific breakthrough that hints at the biological mechanisms plants may have evolved as the planet cooled and life took hold. Learn more at www.vivafresh.net.
Posted by Joseph Riden on June 19,2011 | 04:50 PM
Wow! I just love plants =] This is great!!! Selling and Buying Plants. Plants are so beautiful!!!!! :)
Great Job!!!!!!!!
~Kaleb~
Posted by Kaleb Steele on April 20,2011 | 09:26 AM
I read this article with great interest as I remember when flower production moved out of Southern California for Columbia. I was working in agriculture in Santa Barbara County at the time. I am now an attorney who has been working with the California florists (mentioned above in the comment by Jill Munger). This group of florists here in the States have been severely affected by some form of heavy metal poisioning with the only link between them being they all handled thousands of flowers coming from South American flower producers. Heavy pesticide use there at the time, coupled with heavy chemicals used here to revive the flowers after the long transport. The florists were using solutions heavy with metals, no gloves, numerous cuts on their hands. The Union has been nearly completely AWOL.The old formulations of the "freshing agents" are lost (according to the manufacturer) and the large corporate grocery chains have much larger legal staffs. In the meantime the florists I have met are getting weaker despite all efforts at maintaining their health. I hope the growth in Africa production is not because of cheaper labor and the lack of worker saftey laws...
Posted by Chris Van Hook on March 22,2011 | 08:08 PM
Thanks for posting the response from Jill Munger. She is our daughter and has been fighting the symptoms of flower pesticides for many years.I hope she helped you get the message across! For the person who sAid,"get over it," I WISH SHE COULD! DAVIDA SHIPKOWITZ
Posted by Davida SHIPKOWITZ on March 19,2011 | 01:14 AM
I commend the magazine's editorial decision to assign and print this article on Colombia. It was fair reporting, accurate and unbiased.
Posted by CV Uribe on March 15,2011 | 04:01 PM
Thank you for John McQuaid’s excellent article, “The Secrets Behind Your Flowers,” regarding the South American floral industry and the issues involving daily toxic exposure of the workers handling the floral products. We need to remember that imported flowers treated with toxic chemicals are also handled by florists processing the product at the retail level in this country. Imported floral products are not subject to inspection for unregulated pesticides and fungicides at the border. No regulations exist because flowers are not food.
I am one of seven local floral managers of a large grocery chain who struggle daily with neurological symptoms due to exposure to mercury and other heavy metals (lead, cadmium, arsenic, and silver) found in fungicides and pesticides coming from unregulated countries. We are working with a Congressman now to create some legislation regarding this issue. We hope articles such as John McQuaid’s will educate the US consumer on their own secondary exposure, and result in regulations that will protect consumers and floral employees handling flowers in the US as well as other countries.
For those interested in more information on unrealized problems in the US floral industry, check out the following blogs & YouTube video:
http://squishsquash-squash.blogspot.com/2010/02/heavy-metal-florists-mercury-toxicity.html
http://squishsquash-squash.blogspot.com/2010/05/heavy-metal-florists-jills-journey.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5y950Z9Xn8
Posted by Jill Munger on March 14,2011 | 12:36 AM
In regards to the statement by John McQuaid in Flower Power that the practice of getting flowers from neighborhood florists, who bought blooms grown on U.S. farms, as "increasingly quaint" seems to me no more quaint than buying an ink and paper magazine to read an article about flowers. If our intent is to participate in a race to the bottom then I guess we should mindlessly buy the industrially produced grocery store flower arrangements and ignore the "quaint" neighborhood florist that buys flowers as locally as possible and supports their community in doing so. Where's the beauty in that approach? I would suggest that this article certainly could have better explored the responsible and "green" aspects of the floral industry instead of simply repeating the usual stereotypes and quickly glossing over what you did include about these aspects. I know you could do better if you cared to Smithsonian.
Posted by Eric Gustafson on February 10,2011 | 01:14 PM
As David Cheever's brother, I was tremdously pleased to see some recognition of his keen insight into the potential for growing carnations in Colombia and his hard work over the last 50 years. Dave interest in flowers started in grade school when he started growing pansies in our dad's garden and selling them at a small store across the street. Floraculture became his life long passion.
I am so proud of him. Thank you for this wonderful article.
Posted by Bill Cheever on February 5,2011 | 07:42 PM
Very interesting article; we're trying to encourage consumers to change behaviour in New York by demanding fair trade flowers from their local florists - http://www.2tiptoe.com/featured/behind-the-bouquet/. Wholesalers are bringing flowers in but the demand just isn't there from consumers yet - articles like yours will certainly help from an awareness/education perspective.
Posted by Tread Lightly on February 5,2011 | 02:12 PM
I have sympathy with the workers that spend hours a day "bent over working the flowers", however I recall my mother working in a factory lifting, bending, pulling, and tugging the factory products. She did this because she had children to raise. She came home after 8 hours in the factory (before unions)filled with unclean air and chemical products and cleaned our house, sewed clothes for the family, worked in our massive garden in the spring, summer and fall and ultimately canned or froze the produce. In the winter she sewed clothes for all of us and for other family members. Hard and back breaking work is a way of life for many people. This was a choice my mother made and I love her for it! I am 67 and a hard worker, but nothing like my mother... I praise the workers of any country as they do what is necessary for their families.
Posted by Ellamarie Reier on February 4,2011 | 08:05 PM
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