Advertisement
Main Content Skip to Sidebar and Blog Navigation

PLANTWISE

upcoming events

Tulip Fest!

Email
Candela_yellow_tulip

I wanted to roll around in this field of glowy, sunshiny Tulip ‘Candela’, but it was too muddy. Fie! I settled for a bouquet.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

I wanted to roll around in this field of glowy, sunshiny Tulip ‘Candela’, but it was too muddy. Fie! I settled for a bouquet.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Most of the rows are labeled so you can take notes if, like me, you’re so inclined.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

It was pretty rainy while I was there so some of the tents closed up shop. But all the kids stuff was happening and the wine was certainly flowing. Apparently it was jam-packed on the sunny Saturday before…

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Everything was fine until the rain hit. But five minutes later, it was gone… Handily labeled tulip display beds in the foreground.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

It’s nice to see different types side-by-side for comparison. As I mentioned, I’m a bit of a collector…

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Manning a booth at the Tulip Festival, these fellers from the local Mt Angel Sausage Co will soon attempt to create the Guinness Book of World Records’ longest wiener. Hopefully they’ll post it on their website when they do: http://www.ropesausage.com

I love getting out of town. After many years of living car-free, it’s still an extra-special treat to take a drive in the country or go on a road trip – however short a ride it may be.

If it’s for plant-related purposes, all the better.

This past weekend inaugurated the start of the Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm’s Tulip Fest. This Festival is a great excuse to get out of town and admire the rural beauty of the Willamette Valley. It’s a good half-day excursion that takes about 45 minutes each way from Portland.

I would have written this post yesterday but as soon as I sat down to begin, I got antsy, jumped in the car and – how sweet to have it! – hit the gas. I was turning into the gate at Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm 45 minutes later, amidst waving fields of brightly colored tulips and late-flowering daffodils.

Running for a month, from March 25 to April 25 from 9 to 6 daily, the Tulip Festival is touted as a day of family fun. But there were people of all ages there, from young city couples and cyclists to car loads of families and people who had clearly been coming to the event for years and obviously knew where the fun was.

For the kids, there’s a cow train, hay tend, slide, and horse swings, as well as steam tractors and tram rides. On weekends, grown-ups can enjoy wine tasting and beer swilling, music and a crafters marketplace. I admired an elderly gent carving wooden shoes. Weekdays are toned down a little, without the craft booths, music and booze but with pony and cart rides for the kids and tulips galore for flower-gazers. Wooden Shoe’s blog provides more information about daily activities.

Not to over-share, but I get all fetish-y about tulips at this time of year and engage in embarrassingly detailed comparisons of flower shapes, colors, size, bloom time, foliage color and other qualities. For people like me, there is a sample garden with labeled examples of various tulips and daffodils they sell in their catalog. (See slideshow for some purdy images of all this.) You can also buy pots of forced bulbs for $8 each which can later be planted in your garden, as well as lovely, inexpensive tulip bouquets – bundles of which now adorn my place. The main business of Wooden Shoe, though, is their bulb trade. You can order bulbs for autumn planting now or wait until September or October to pick them. Buying them now ensures the best selection and they do run out of certain varieties every year, such as the gorgeous black tulip Queen of Night.

Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm is one of only a few remaining bulb growers in the Pacific Northwest. While most spring flowering bulbs sold today are grown in Holland, Wooden Shoe actually grows their own tulips, daffodils and other traditionally “Dutch” bulbs in the fields of their family farm.

Another wonderful thing about Wooden Shoe is their commitment to sustainable agricultural practices. They are one of only a handful of Oregon growers who are certified by Veriflora for adhering to sustainable practices throughout their business. I hope to see sustainability certification spread in the cut flower industry, which has a less-than-stellar record of minimizing toxic hazards, with dire consequences to workers, as well as consumers and the fields, greenhouses and surrounding environment. Support certified businesses and look for organic or sustainably-grown cut flowers and plants whenever possible.

Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm
www.woodenshoe.com
1-800-711-2006

Tags: Gardening Events Places to Go Flowers Plant Sale Family Fun

 

Comments Speech Bubble

By helen arthur on Mar 31, 2010 at 9:24AM

I love the photos- Tulip colours are always so luminous- I don’t know if they are prettier under sunny skies or soft silvery damp skies…. The nascissus planted out in patches for comparison, completewth catalogue page number is a great idea too…

By Loree on Mar 31, 2010 at 12:43PM

When I lived in Seattle I would drive up to the Mt Vernon area for the Tulipfest almost every year. I’ve never been to Oregon’s version…I think I see a little outing in my future, thanks Kate!

By kate on Mar 31, 2010 at 1:08PM

Helen, thanks for the compliment about the photos. My photos don’t do the beautiful saturated colors justice. It was such a kick in the pants to stand in the middle of those color-drenched fields…

Loree, I’ve never been to the Mt Vernon fest – I would love to go one of these years. If you go to this one in Woodburn, bring your warm woolies in case the wind picks up. Man, I got cold! Tho’ it was warm and sunny the day before…

Add a Comment Speech Bubble

We retain the right to remove comments containing personal attacks or excessive profanity, and comments unrelated to the editorial content.

Help us fight spam. Please type the words below to submit your comment.

Advertisement