40 Cut Flowers We No Longer Grow
Rudbeckia โCherry Brandyโ - beautiful from afar, a tattered mess up close
Updated February 13, 2024
On my 1-acre flower farm in Lockport, New York, I grow over 100 varieties of annual and perennial flowers and foliage. My farm has an enormous variety of colors, textures, bloom shapes and bloom sizes. I confidently say that I wouldnโt be the same florist with my style of floral design if I didnโt grow my own flowers. The uniqueness & variety of my arrangements nods to the abundance of my field.
Over the past three seasons, Iโve experimented growing well over 200 varieties of flowers and foliage. Through trial and error, every year I nix varieties that just donโt work as a cut flower for one or multiple reasons.
Related: How to Choose Flowers for Your Farm
Believe it or not, saying โnoโ to more flower varieties every year is the most liberating feeling! Iโm effectively narrowing down the list of best cut flowers & foliage, and the only way to do that is by growing and learning what works and what doesnโt.
If youโre a flower grower, please donโt let this list discourage you from trying any of these varieties! This is simply a record of my personal experience and flower preferences. Other flower farmers successfully grow many of the flowers on this list. Everyoneโs growing conditions differ, and as such, flower production differs. I have written this post partly to keep track of the flowers Iโve nixed and the reasons why, so I can go back and read it later on, perhaps to convince myself to put the seed packets down.
Here is our 2nd โcutโ list from the 2021 season
Cut Flowers from 2018-2020 that I will not be growing in 2021โฆ
COSMOS โDOUBLE CLICK SNOW PUFFโ - I wanted to love Snow Puff so badly, but after three years of it being a dud, Iโm done. The first bloom is okay although the heads droop so badly they donโt hold up in bouquets and arrangements well. Many blooms grow in deformed. I highly prefer โPurity,โ โVersailles Whiteโ and โCupcakes Whiteโ for white cosmos. Oddly enough, Snow Puffโs sister, โDouble Click Cranberries,โ is one of my favorite cuts in the entire field.
SILENE โBLUSHING LANTERNSโ - Floret tantalized me with this plant so I tried it and just didnโt keep up with the harvest. The seed pods are cute, but my stems were too short and it isnโt worth the real estate. EDIT: I love Silene โBlushing Lanternsโ and wonโt go without it. I wrote a whole blog post about it here!
POPPIES - As much as I want to swim in armloads of โChampagne Bubbles,โ poppies just donโt last long enough as a cut flower and I donโt have enough use for them super early in the season.
CLARY SAGE - I thought the white-tipped foliage would be such a unique addition to bouquets, but I never used it. The stems are too short. I plan to dig up and plant some of it in my herb garden at home.
BROOMCORN/SORGHUM - Every year I grow broomcorn with the intention of using it for fall wreaths and I never do. Then the mice feast on it in my barn. So weโre saying goodbye to broomcorn until I have an actual use for it (like making brooms?) Edit: If you do fall or even winter wreath making, the broomcorn would be a nice everlasting accent to add to wreaths. If I have room in the future, I may bring this back solely for wreath use.
ORNAMENTAL CORN - I had an admittedly fun time experimenting with heirloom corn this year on the farm. I grew a handful of incredibly unique varieties, including Dakota Black Popcorn, Hopi Pink Flour Corn, Montana Cudu Corn, Oaxaca Green Corn and Strawberry Popcorn (seeds all from Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Co). While watching the corn grow was fun and harvesting it was even more fun, all I did with it was create a little corn swag for my house. Not worth flower farm real estate, but I will grow fresh corn at home in our vegetable garden. I also had a corn smut problem with certain varieties.
LOVE-IN-A-PUFF VINE - I have a love-hate relationship with this vine. It adds such elegance & whimsy to bouquets and vase arrangements but itโs such a pain to harvest and wilts at the drop of a hat. I much favor hardy clematis, so Iโm saying goodbye to Love in a Puff for now โ although I imagine I will allow this plant will creep back into my life at some point!
CELOSIA โCELWAY WHITEโ - I tried the new Celway line of celosia this year and Iโm keeping โCelway Terracottaโ in the field, but the White has to go. It just doesnโt do much for me color-wise.
COSMOS โAPRICOT LEMONADEโ - Underwhelming color, flimsy cut. Seemed to drop petals much quicker than other cosmos varieties.
COSMOS โVELOUETTEโ - Another cosmos variety that I love the look of, but it doesnโt last long in the field and is a flimsy cut. I prefer โRubenza,โ which isnโt the same look but satisfies the antique burgundy color palette and is a much hardier bloom.
LEMON BASIL - I grow 5 different types of basil so I needed to cut someone. Although the scent is divine, Lemon is just too short. Iโll stick to growing this one in the edible herb garden at home.
RUDBECKIA TRILOBA - This is the holy grail of cut & come again perennial bouquet fillers, but Iโm not a fan of the way it looks. Just not my jam. When I donโt use something because I donโt like the way it looks, thatโs when itโs time to say goodbye.
RUDBECKIA โINDIAN SUMMERโ - Same as above, minus the holy grail thing. Indian Summer has reseeded itself all over the farm and Iโm sick of weeding it, so I will never intentionally plant it again. It does come in handy from time to time though, so I allow certain sections to reseed.
BORAGE, WHITE - Thereโs no point in growing white borage when you can grow blue borage! The white is rather underwhelming.
SCABIOSA, โSNOWMAIDENโ - Wimpy, wimpy flowers. I will continue to grow โRed Merlotโ and โBlack Knightโ annual scabiosa going forward โ they are much hardier post-harvest and in the field.
DAHLIA, โPENHILL MONARCHโ - This variety of dahlia is so late that in my Zone 6b climate there is no point in growing a flower that takes this long. I planted this in May and wasnโt harvesting it until mid- to end of September. Iโll stick to earlier flowering dahlias.
CLEOME - I love cleome as a garden plant but it doesnโt make a good cut flower. The stems are wildly sticky, they grow SPIKES, and the petals are fragile and tend to drop after harvesting. Great showy garden plant, though!
CALENDULA - I have been unsuccessful in growing calendula with usable long stems, so Iโm saying goodbye.
SINGLE STEM SUNFLOWERS (ALL VARIETIES) - I only grow branching sunflowers going forward. To learn why, read A Case for Branching Sunflowers. I donโt like using sunflowers in my own designs and I donโt get too many asks for them otherwise, so theyโre not worth the space.
ZINNIA โZINDERELLAโ SERIES / SCABIOSA FLOWERING ZINNIA - Another one we all want to love but struggle to get that perfect, double-flowered bloom. I learned from another flower farmer that Zinderella-type zinnias only double flower when they receive lots and lots of fertilizer and they prefer cooler growing seasons.
ZINNIA โENVYโ - Many of these blooms grow in brown, in my experience. โQueen Lime Blotchโ grows better for me.
MARIGOLD โSPUN ORANGEโ - This variety does not produce useable stems (short, grows like a bush), and many of the flowers didnโt actually open or turned brown before I could harvest them. This is a great option for edible flower production, dye garden, or for making marigold garlands, but not as a cut flower with usable stem length. Read here about Growing โStrawberry Blondeโ Marigolds.
GAURA โWHIRLING BUTTERFLIESโ - I have come to absolutely love this plant as an ornamental perennial in the landscape, but it is a wretched cut flower. The blooms are wimpy and drop quickly. I dug up all of my Gaura and moved it to the entrance of the farm gate and to my home landscaping where theyโre very much enjoyed as beautiful, drought tolerant showy plants.
ASPARAGUS - Yes, the veggie! I love using asaparagus greens in vase arrangements but unfortunately my asparagus crop was decimated by the asparagus beetle โ and I didnโt feel like fighting him. This makes me sad because in arrangements, asparagus fronds are so dainty and gorgeous.
CHINESE LANTERNS - I thought this would be a fun crop for fall arrangements but this crop was also decimated by what I believe to be flea beetles or similar. I hardly have any bug pressure, but this crop really took a beating so I wonโt bother growing them again.
CANNA LILLIES - Again, great landscape/planter flower, but not a good cut. The petals are very flimsy and quite frankly, having another crop to dig up at the end of the season is just too much.
BUNNY TAILS - This ornamental grass is super cute but the stems are really short and it just isnโt worth the time. I prefer โFeathertop,โ or foraging for any locally available grasses rather than growing on the farm.
CERINTHE (HONEYWORT) - I love the sweet purple ends on honeywort but I didnโt use much of it, and it doesnโt gather a premium price by the stem.
EUCALYPTUS - Yes. I grew Euc in the uncovered field in 2019 and got a pretty good crop from it, but Iโm not field-growing it again. For one, I donโt like using a lot of eucalyptus in my designs. If I have a hoophouse in the future, I will definitely grow Euc en masse to sell to florists and use for weddings that request it.
DUSTY MILLER - Kind of the same deal with Eucalyptus in that Iโm not crazy about the way it looks. Dusty also seems to take a long time to get to that usable stem length. I prefer to grow perennial Lambโs Ear and Wormwood instead.
ORACH - The deer ate it.
BACHELORS BUTTONS - Iโd rather double down on scabiosa than grow bachelorโs buttons. Harvesting is tedious.
AGERATUM, WHITE & BLUE - The blue ones are pretty but this flower just isnโt worth the farm space. I prefer other hardier white flowers such as gomphrena, statice and statice; and other blue flowers such as borage and delphinium.
AMARANTH, โDREADLOCKSโ - A fun one but not practical for wedding work. For burgundy amaranth, I love โOpopeoโ and โHopi Red.โ
AMARANTH, โMIRAโ - I wanted to love this one and grow bucketfuls of it, but it grew in deformed and seemed to be either diseased and/or buggy. I think this was a personal problem because other people successfully grow โMiraโ.
ARTICHOKES - Takes up too much space.
ASCLEPIAS PHYSOCARPA (HAIRY BALLS) - I had a fantastic crop of hairy balls in 2019, but florists were not buying it and tons of stems went to waste. It was a hit in my fall wreath class, but I still canโt justify growing much of it anymore. If it was perennial, Iโd keep it in the field, but in Zone 6 it has to be replanted year after year. EDIT: May grow again in 2022 for a dried flower crop.
ANNUAL PHLOX, โCREME BRULEE,โ โWHIPPED CREAMโ & โDULCE DE LECHEโ - Itโs been 3 years of failure for me and annual phlox. It breaks my heart, but I must give it up. The amount of time it takes for phlox to get long, usable stems is beyond my patience. It must be cut so many times for months before it can be used in a bouquet (at least this has been my experience). EDIT: In 2022, Iโm trying annual phlox โCherry Caramelโ but going to plant much earlier and treat as a true hardy annual.
CLARKIA - I wanted to love this one. For some reason, the stems were too short and the rebloom was lame. I will try this again in my yard where growing conditions are slighly less harsh. EDIT: Trying this one again in 2022 because I canโt resist! Will plant much earlier and treat as a true hardy annual.
RUDBECKIA, โCHERRY BRANDYโ - This is such a beautiful garden flower but the petals seem to attract bugs. From afar, the flowers are vibrant & gorgeous, but up close, they are tattered and chewed. My favorite variety of Rudbeckia is โSahara,โ which does not experience abuse from the local bug life.
Donโt miss our updated list for 2022 here!
peace, love + plant magic.
Fran Parrish
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