It’s a flurry of activity
these days on the premises of a handful of orchid and ornamental plant farmers
in the district.
The commercial utilisation
of Valentine’s Day, which falls on February 14, as a major marketing event has
come as a windfall for the small-scale growers here.
Their farms, spread over the
suburbs of Neyyattinkara, Kallambalam, Navaikulam, and Nedumangadu, were once
fallow paddy fields, which now run on a profit and provide local employment.
In high demand
The demand for locally grown
exotic flowers to embellish hotel foyers, restaurants, jewellery shops, garment
showrooms, discotheques, marriage venues, and upmarket homes in Chennai,
Bangalore, and Mumbai has been abounding and it has peaked this Valentine season.
In the run-up to the day,
the farmers daily send hundreds of orchid stems, Heliconia blooms, ornamental
foliage, and genetically engineered miniature “gingers, pineapples and
plantains” via road, rail, and air to the metros.
Rahul Raveendran, an orchid
cultivator, says that gifting expensive and custom-made floral bouquets replete
with orchids, roses, foliage and geraniums has become the order of the day in
upscale cities and the trend has benefitted farmers here.
Exotic and brightly coloured
orchids, particularly varieties such as the red Aranthera Teacher Julin and Ann
Black, the bright yellow Beatrix, and the multi-hued Spider, are slowly
supplanting the rose in floral arrangements, the flower traditionally considered
the icon of romantic love.
The demand for orchids has
encouraged several unlikely people to enter the business.
For instance, Madhu Sankar
sold his provision store in mid-2000 and started orchid cultivation on one acre
of leased paddy field at Navaikulam.
Today, he runs his own
four-acre farm.
Growers here say that they
are willing to help newcomers start their own farms.
The Kollam archdiocese has
reportedly evinced interest in farming orchids and ornamental plants.
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