Triangle Nursery Ltd is a family owned wholesale flower company. Established for more than three generations, we specialise in the direct UK supply of top quality fresh flowers, plants and floral sundries.

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Entries in wholesale flowers (4)

Thursday
Nov172011

What does the FleurPrimeur label mean?

The FleurPrimeur label has been around for a few years now and is the stamp of quality and innovation. Any cut flower variety allowed to called itself FleurPrimeur has to meet strict standards of vase life, opening qualities and transportability. The FleurPrimeur awards encourage cut flower breeders to introduce better varieties to the wholesale flower markets.

The FloraHolland awards take place every year and the votes are taken in October when the nominated varieties are announced. In January 2012 the 'Glazen Tulp' award will be given to the best overall novelty.

This year, (2011), the beautiful, lilac Dolcetto Rose, (bred by Schreurs Roses & grown by Linssen Roses in Ethiopia), reached third place which is fantastic achievement!

Here at Triangle Nursery, FleurPrimeur flowers are always available & that includes the fabulous Dolcetto Rose!

To see our fabulous range of quality cut flowers, please see our extensive online wholesale flower shop.
To register, please click here.

Tuesday
Dec072010

Winter Weddings are on the up - but why?

Over the last two years winter weddings have been on the increase and the latest stats show that June, (traditionally the most popular wedding month), has fallen into third place behind July and August. September and October are only just behind! The statistics now prove that there are more weddings in November than in April or March & that December accounts for 6.7% of all venue bookings! The summer months have always been described as 'the wedding season' - but nowadays this is certainly not the case.

So why are winter weddings gaining in popularity? Well, there are a number of theories - themed weddings are very much in vogue, venues such as castles and country mansions with roaring log fires are lovely, but is the real reason the recession? Many venues have less demand for winter dates and huge savings can be made. Florists are often prepared to lower their rates to encourage more work in quieter times, caterers always sharpen their pencils in slower months etc, etc. Here at Triangle Nursery we have seen the wedding season expand at both ends of the spectrum. Our season now starts in earnist at the end of February and slows down towards the end of October. Between these two dates the supply of specialist wedding grade flowers is at its highest. The demand for advice is now constant all year round with numerous estimates and packages suggested on a daily basis.

 

Wednesday
Jan272010

New and exclusive wholesale Tulip varieties for 2010 from FloraHolland

Every year, mSpace Starany new varieties of Tulip are introduced into the markeFlaming Flagt. In the first season, these varieties are supplied in small numbers and are auctioned at FloraHolland as 'exclusive' varieties. FleurPrimeur are the varieties that have only very recently been launched into the market. The varieties are available for at least 6 consecutive weeks and differ from the existing assortment. Starting in 2009, all FleurPrimeur Tulips at every FloraHolland location will be tested for quality and sensitivity to transport at FloraHolland's Product Knowledge Centre. This means that the FleurPrimeur label not only stands for innovation, but also for quality. Tulips are evryone's favourite when in season & here at Triangle Nursery we stock them in vast numbers on a daily basis.

Thursday
Jan212010

Gaza flowers in Europe again as Israel eases closures

GAZA CITY — This time last year Adham Hijazi was feeding his world-class carnations to animals, but now he hopes they will reach European markets thanks to an easing of Israeli closures on the Gaza Strip.

For the first time since the Islamist Hamas movement seized power in the territory in June 2007, Gaza's flower and strawberry farmers may be able to export most of their produce to Europe with help from The Netherlands.

"There are promises that the crossings will remain open for exports," the 33-year-old farmer says as workers clip carnations and pack them into crates in a sprawling greenhouse near the southern Gaza town of Rafah.

"Last year our losses were huge. I alone lost 800,000 dollars (550,000 euros)," he says. "We harvested the flowers and then we fed them to the sheep and cows."

Israel allowed only limited exports of flowers and strawberries -- Gaza's main cash crops -- during the season following the bloody Hamas takeover in June 2007 before halting all exports in January 2008, according to the Palestine Trade Centre (Paltrade), which works with the World Bank.

Exports only resumed after Israel's devastating 22-day war on Hamas in December 2008 and January 2009, when 14 truckloads of carnations were allowed out of Gaza, according to Paltrade.

"The difficulty was that the peak of the season was far gone, and another issue was that many farmers had stopped by then," said a Dutch official involved in the export projects, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

This season, Israel began allowing exports in December, and since then more than a million flowers, mostly roses and carnations, have been exported to The Netherlands, where many are then sent on to markets in Russia and Europe.

"So far it has been working well... There is a regular export taking place," the official says, adding that roughly three shipments of 150,000 flowers were passing through the crossings each week.

Farmers near Rafah have planted some 30 hectares (75 acres) of flowers with assistance from The Netherlands, according to Said al-Rai, the Palestinian coordinator of the project.

"The produce is distinguished by its high quality and deep-rooted reputation in European markets," he says, adding that they expect to export 35 million flowers this season, mainly roses and carnations.

Gaza's strawberry growers have also resumed exports after nearly two years, under a similar programme with Agrexco, an Israeli firm that has marketed and distributed Gaza produce to Europe since the 1980s under its "Coral" brand.

However, Israel only began allowing exports at the start of January, causing the growers to miss out on the first two months of the four-month peak season.

Since then around 40 tonnes of strawberries have been exported, according to the Dutch official.

The lush fields around the village of Beit Lahiya near the border with Israel boast some of the best strawberries in the region, but they were damaged when tanks and bulldozers rumbled through the area during the war.

"We struggled and we farmed in order to export in the period between November 15 and December 25, but Israel did not open the crossings in this period despite the efforts by The Netherlands," says Assad Othman Yassin, the head of marketing in the Hamas-run agricultural ministry.

"On January 3 we exported 21 tonnes, but in the past we always began exporting in the middle of October and continued until March. In a normal season we would export 1,800 tonnes, or about 70 tonnes a day," he adds.

This year farmers around Beit Lahiya have planted 50 hectares (124 acres), compared with 85 hectares (210 acres) in previous years, according to the local farming cooperative.

The farmers have also complained about delays at Israel's Kerem Shalom crossing, where boxes of produce can sit in the desert sun for hours at a time.

"Relatively speaking, it's been a good season so far," the Dutch official says, but he admits that Kerem Shalom is "not an ideal crossing."

Each month Israel allows hundreds of truckloads of basic goods into the territory of 1.5 million people, but apart from the strawberries and flowers it has allowed virtually no exports since Hamas took power.