National Garden Bureau
National Garden Bureau, the non-profit organization promoting gardening in North America on behalf of the horticulture industry and its members, just rolled out all six of the 2023 “Year of the” plant classes last week at Cultivate’22.
For the bulb crop, 2023 will be the Year of the Amaryllis.
For annuals, 2023 will be the Year of the Celosia.
For edibles, 2023 will be the Year of the Broccoli.
For houseplants, 2023 will be the Year of the Orchid.
For perennials, 2023 will be the Year of the Rudbeckia.
For flowering shrubs, 2023 will be the Year of the Spirea.
The “Year of the” program chooses crops specifically for the North American market that are easy to grow, genetically diverse and with a lot of new breeding to showcase. Breeders, brokers, seed companies, growers and garden centers throughout the U.S. and Canada are urged to highlight these flowers and plants when planning their marketing for the 2023 season as the publicity generated from this program is substantial.
By November 1, 2022, National Garden Bureau will have photos of numerous varieties of all six crops (provided by NGB members) posted on the NGB website. NGB also provides PDF’s of fact sheets, flyers, handouts, signage, poster, PowerPoint presentations, etc. After November 1, all of the above can be downloaded at no charge from the NGB website. These tools will help the North American home garden industry promote these non-branded, non-specific varieties to consumers and encourage gardening with these interesting crop classes.
Latest from Garden Center
- Voting now open for the National Garden Bureau's 2026 Green Thumb Award Winners
- Master Nursery Garden Centers launches new Bumper Crop Organic Raised Bed Mix for home gardeners
- New Michigan box tree moth alert available in English and Spanish
- The Growth Industry Episode 8: From NFL guard to expert gardener with Chuck Hutchison
- [WATCH] Beyond the holidays: Finding success with unique seasonal events
- How Peconic River Herb Farm became a plant retail destination
- Roots of the cool
- 2025 trial standouts