Tropical Gardening: Buy local for Valentine’s Day

Photo courtesy of Voltaire Moise Anthurium make great Valentine's gifts, especially when given in a container made by local artists.
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Valentine’s Day is Tuesday. Luckily we have the weekend to prepare if you haven’t done shopping for your loved ones. You might consider jewelry or a fancy dinner at a local restaurant, but with today’s economy it might be better to be a bit conservative.

Valentine’s Day is a time to celebrate our love for spouses, friends and family, but most folks don’t know about the dark origins of this holiday. The history is shrouded in mystery. It appears to have started with the ancient Roman festival of Lupercalia. Of course, they borrowed it from even earlier pagans. At any rate, before it became a Christian holiday, men sacrificed goats or dogs and then whipped the women with the hides of slain animals. This was supposed to enhance fertility!

According to some historians, there was lots of drinking and nakedness. A lottery was often included where men would pull a woman’s name from a jar for a temporary match. Some matches lasted and some were one- night stands. The result was almost certain fertility!

Pope Gelasius I recast the pagan festival as a Christian feast day circa 496 AD. The name, St. Valentine’s Day, appears to be named for two martyrs with the same name executed by Emperor Claudius II in the third century AD. Their martyrdom was ultimately honored by the Catholic Church.

Shakespeare and Chaucer romanticized it in their works. Handmade cards became the tokens-du-jour in the Middle Ages,. Today we see the holiday in a much more romantic way. But what really made big business of it all was the mass production of Hallmark Cards starting in 1913. This year sales of cards and gifts are expected to be around $20 billion dollars.

We could look at Valentine’s Day from a cynical point of view considering its origins, but love saves the day. The joy of selecting a card or gift for loved ones brings out the best in us. On the receiving end, it warms hearts and helps our spouses, children, parents and friends feel very special.

Sometimes it is hard to know what to give those for whom you care. The old saying “Candy is dandy and wine is fine” works for some.

Locally-produced chocolate candy is always appreciated and helps our local farmers and retail businesses. Local artists create jewelry that can be appropriate and for the Hawaiian gardener, what could be better than giving or receiving a special Anthurium, orchid or bromeliad!

Hawaii is famous for the thousands of species and hybrids of orchids. In fact, the Big Island was once known as the Orchid Isle. Even though they are rather difficult to grow in most mainland homes and gardens, here they grow and flower with little or no care. Some species have naturalized to grace our forests and roadsides. A flowering orchid can last for weeks in the home and then placed in the crotch of a tree and continue to give flowers for years. Available at most garden shops and nurseries, you will find Cattleyas, Dendrobiums, Oncidiums, Vandas and many more.

Bromeliads come in all shapes, sizes and colors. The best for this holiday are ones with red inflorescences and leaves. Some grow best on rocks or in trees as epiphytes. Many don’t require soil and just a minimum of water. Most require excellent drainage if grown in pots. In fact, too mush water or poor drainage is the cause of most failures.

The favorite flower of all for Valentine’s Day is the heart shaped Anthurium. Hawaiian growers have developed many hybrids of all shapes and sizes in colors from white, orange, red, variegated and even almost black. The black might not be the best gift for this this occasion.

Anthuriums do well in shady moist conditions with good soil drainage high in organic matter.

Whatever gift you decide upon, just forget about the strange origins of the holiday, Remember to give with all the love you can find within yourself. You will find giving with love is one of the key elements of Hawaiian Aloha.