Problem: Retail and wholesale grower Weidners’ Gardens in
Solution: Plant pansies in the field and mirror the begonia event with an Annual Pansy Dig in November.
Details: After weeks of building up anticipation and excitement in the local press and through customer mailings, Weidners’ Gardens kicks off the Annual Pansy Dig every Nov. 1. No one touches the ground with a digging trowel until the opening bell sounds at 9 a.m., said owner Evelyn Weidner. Gates open at 8 a.m. for diggers to scope out what they want and prepare for the harvest. Half of the pansy field is open Nov. 1, and the other half is open for digging the following weekend, which includes a pansy festival. Weidners’ Ball Horticultural Co. rep, Miriam Levy, is always on hand for opening day and the festival weekend, Weidner said. Levy makes notes on what varieties are the best sellers to prepare for the following year’s orders. Weidners’ typically sells 7,000-8,000 pansies during the first week or 10 days after the Annual Pansy Dig. The event “brings in money during a season when many of our other plants aren’t being grown,” Weidner said. “It maximizes the use of the land, complements the cyclamen and poinsettia crop and maximizes sales in a short seven weeks.”
{sidebar id=1}
For more: Weidners’ Gardens, (760) 436-2194; www.weidners.com.
Latest from Garden Center
- University of Florida study unlocks secrets of invasive short-spined thrips
- Kian-backed Eden Brothers adds Michael Hollenstein as CEO, expands senior leadership team
- IPPS announces organizational rebrand, new website and 2026 international membership drive
- Growscape appoints chief manufacturing officer, Brian Cunningham
- Experts help Florida cemetery become state’s first to earn arboretum accreditation
- Fresh Inset appoints Gordon Robertson as general manager, North America
- Society of American Florists planning fifth annual Next Gen LIVE! conference for young floral professionals
- Applications now open for American Floral Endowment graduate scholarships