Yahoo – AFP,
Alina Dieste, 12 Feb 2015
Nemocon (Colombia) (AFP) - Work is hectic these days for El Redil, as the flower company based in the savanna surrounding the Colombian capital Bogota hurries to meet orders from all over the world for Valentine's Day.
![]() |
Workers
prepare roses for export at a farm in Nemocon, Cundinamarca
department, Colombia on February 2, 2015 (AFP Photo/Eitan Abramovich)
|
Nemocon (Colombia) (AFP) - Work is hectic these days for El Redil, as the flower company based in the savanna surrounding the Colombian capital Bogota hurries to meet orders from all over the world for Valentine's Day.
"If
you don't do well in Valentine's it's a lost year," said manager Fernando
Arenas during an AFP tour of the fragrant-smelling rose farms in the town of
Nemocon.
![]() |
A worker
selects flowers at a farm in
Nemocon, Cundinamarca department,
Colombia on
February 2, 2015 (AFP
Photo/Eitan Abramovich)
|
Dozens of
workers dethorn the roses, classify them and transfer the flowers to wire
racks, as well as prepare attractive bouquets that they hope will make
someone's Valentine's Day.
The flowers
are shipped fresh to people thousands of miles away and kept cold throughout
their journey. Refrigerated trucks take the flowers to an airport in Colombia
and from there they go to the rest of the world.
Miami and
Amsterdam are the two main global distribution points.
Yellow
roses are popular among young people, lilacs are preferred by the Japanese, but
mostly the classic red are the roses chosen for Valentine's Day, the El Redil
staff said.
The popular
rose of the time "is a matter of fashion," said Arenas.
Colombia --
the world's second-largest flower exporter after the Netherlands -- ships up to
1,000 different types of flower, including exotic orchids, but the rose is the
undisputed queen.
Colombia is
celebrating its 50th anniversary of the flower export business, and helping its
rise to the top is the role of the United States market as its star client.
![]() |
Workers
prepare roses for export at a
farm in Nemocon, Cundinamarca
department, Colombia on February 2,
2015 (AFP Photo/Eitan Abramovich)
|
Arenas said
the last Valentine's Day flower shipment was scheduled for February 9, but the
weather can play havoc: 2010 was a black year for sales after a freeze
destroyed crops, he said.
Cupid
cash
Valentine's
Day represents 12 percent of annual flower sales in Colombia.
Colombia's
$1.34 billion in annual flower exports puts the country second to the
Netherlands and ahead of Ecuador and Kenya.
Colombia's
tropical climate helps it compete. The country can send shipments not only for
Valentine's Day but for most major celebrations, including holidays in Russia,
Spain and Japan, all year round.
The
industry generates some 130,000 direct and indirect jobs, or about 15 people
per acre -- seven times more than coffee plantations.
![]() |
Workers
prepare roses at a farm in Nemocon, Cundinamarca department,
Colombia on
February 2, 2015 (AFP Photo/Eitan Abramovich)
|
Colombia's
flower business, while booming, has had to confront numerous challenges:
attracting workers for the manual labor can be difficult, and so is competing
with lower labor costs in Africa.
"Water
scarcity, lack of sun, snow preventing on-time production, all of that affects
the sector," president of Asocolflores, Augusto Solano, told AFP.
The
organization claims those difficulties have led to a decreasing profit margin
over the years.
"I
wish it was the month of Valentine's, not just the day," a rueful Solano
said.




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