est. 2018
We grow flowers to inspire our everyday with the love and beauty of the earth.
Nestled among the mountains in Paradise, UT, our farm flourishes with the seasonal color of flowers, from delicious daffodils in the spring, to romantic lisianthus in late summer, to specialty wreaths in the fall and winter, and so much more.
I grew up hauling manure out of the pasture and with chickens chasing me in the barn where I helped my family stack hay. I didn’t grow up a farmer, but I did grow up knowing hard work.
My flower farming journey began in 2016 when I had not planted a single flower seed in my garden. I mistakenly thought I had missed the window for planting flowers and so did not give it another thought for the rest of the season.
It wasn’t until an August evening when my daughters, then 4 and 2, were eagerly looking around the garden and yard for flowers to put in my hair.
It was such a beautiful summer evening and I felt so incredibly happy as I watched them explore and play in the garden I had grown. But when they came back with little fists full of garlic chives and a few straggly self-seeded cosmos, I realized how much I needed flowers in my garden.
I saw just how incomplete my garden was without flowers.
The following winter I began researching growing flowers and that is when I first learned about the Slow Flowers movement and the need for locally grown flowers. At first I sought out who my flower farmer was, where was my local flower farm?
I searched online and visited the local farmers markets but found nothing. And it occurred to me that I can be the local flower farm.
And so began my flower farming journey. I started that first year farming on my 1/10th of an acre suburban lot in Salt Lake City, UT as well as at a community plot for a total of only 1,200 sqft. I did my best to learn how to farm and how much I could grow, and brought it all to a local farmers market. I learned the joy and beauty of sharing the flowers with others.
Within two years I had the opportunity to scale up my farm to 1/3rd of an acre with a high tunnel. I grew more flowers than I could imagine possible and learned what it meant to farm with intent and the future in mind. I learned what it meant to farm for a community.
I farmed there for two years until the end of my 4th season when I had the opportunity to buy a farm of my own.
In 2021 my family and I moved onto our forever farm in Paradise, UT where I have the opportunity to farm on 1.25 acres of land tucked deep inside the Wasatch Mountain Range.
Having a farm of my own has only strengthened my resolve to establish roots,grow as a farmer and individual, and be inspired every day by the farm and flowers so I will never lose that sacred feeling of being in awe of the life around me.