The fragrant scent of roses, lilacs and peonies belied the sweat and stress simmering in L.A.'s Flower District on Friday, where a nationwide flower shortage was driving up demand — and prices — ahead of Mothers’ Day.
There are several factors driving the shortage, many of which can be tied to the pandemic, industry experts said. COVID-19 shutdowns made it hard to predict retail numbers, and unfavorable weather conditions affected many growing regions. “I’m the family matriarch, and I haven’t been able to be the matriarch for a year,” Gahring said, tearing up. “It’s been a hard year, and I just want to honor them.”
But some of the ramifications of last year’s COVID-19 shutdowns are still being felt in the flower world, according to industry experts. “Everything is becoming a little bit more complex as a result of the pandemic, or the transition from the pandemic into activating the local economy,” he said. “There are additional costs that are being incurred.”
That people have so much to celebrate was a welcome change for many vendors. During the pandemic, sadder occasions often filled the places left by canceled birthdays, weddings,“All those things were offline, and sadly, some of those events had been replaced by funerals,” said Chatoff, of California Flower Mall. “So there was the need for florals — for celebrating a loved one — but in a different way.
Flowers are overrated. Make Mom breakfast!
If there’s a flower shortage? Why not give your mother some dogecoin and introduce her to the moon?
Oh really the flower is gone off of the vaccines
thanks
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