Flowers have been adding beauty to our planet for millions of years, playing an important role in the evolution of our ecosystems, cultures and civilization. From births to funerals, they are symbols of our love, grief, passion and so many other human feelings. Can you imagine spring in Wisconsin without the expectations of color coming out of the ground (often before the snow is melted) from tulips, daffodils and grape crocuses?
During my college days, I learned a few things. (Ha, ha! I can hear Liz laughing in the background.) I used to deliver flowers for Felly's Flowers during semester breaks, and even though I spent eight to ten hours a day with them, my understanding is on par with quantum physics. Nonetheless, here is what I did learn. 1) Most of the roses we sold came from the Netherlands, 2) we used dye to give our carnations a certain color and 3) I learned women love getting flowers at work. The more people who see them receiving them the better.
The list of what I don't know, however, remains long. I'm amazed that when it gets cold, they know to go dormant, storing their energy until the conditions improve the following spring. These survival instincts not only allow them passage through winter, but drought and wildfires, as well.
Most importantly, few of us know the real work and dedication that goes into turning an ordinary seed into the amazing creations we find in floral shops and greenhouses.
What would it be like if flowers could actually talk to us? Do they have personalities? Are the flowers used for funerals sad or serious? Are roses, so popular at Valentiines, not only thorny, but also horny? I've got to believe sunflowers have a sunny disposition on life. How could they not?
My favorite flowers would be those with a sense of humor.
Daisy: "Why did the flower go to the dentist? " After a few moments, the daisy continues, " Give up? It's because it needed a root canal!"
The tulip snickers, shaking its leafy stalk, and says: "Well, since it's Valentine's Day, did you know tulips are better than one?" The daisy wiggles in the dirt with laughter.
And so, I imagine, it goes...
After 45 years, and a few aborted attempts to retire along the way, she is hanging up her pruning snips, bags of mulch and watering can. Ah, retirement!
In 1977, after a few years of digging in people's mouths as a dentall hygienist using tooth scrapers, plaque removers and other teeth cleaning tools, she went back to school for an associate's degree in horticulture.
Less than two years later, she was digging in flowers pots instead of patient's mouths. She had found something that she enjoyed and could really sink her fingers into.
She credits our family's semi-agrarian lifestyle (half a century ago many of our neighbors had gardens that filled their back yards, including ours) for her interest in flowers and plants. I have to agree -- once you get dirt under your fingernails, it's hard to get it out.
I wish mom and dad had pictures of us as kids, working in the garden, covered in dirt from head to toes. I can remember one summer day after a thunderstorm the night before. Our job was to bolster up the corn stalks that had fallen during the heavy rains. If you've ever tried to contain mud, you can imagine how frustrating it was mounding up slop while fighting off the mosquitoes. Despite the occassional hardship of growing vegetables and other plants, something took root in Linda's mind -- and heart -- that led to a lifetime of bringing success to whatever she was planting.
As part of her univerity studies, she needed three months of hands-on experience (an internship) at a local greenhouse. Fortunately, she had a great one at home -- La Crosse Floral. It was during these three months that she met Richard and John Zoerb (a high school classmate of our mother's) and formed a relationship -- one that led to her being offered a job when she was finished with her associates degree. It was an offer she would not refuse. Her first day at La Crosse Floral was December 10, 1979.
Like all new employees, she needed training, which meant learning how to do the planting and watering. Over time it expanded to cleaning work areas, packing products and even working at the retail store downtown (which she confessses to having not enjoyed). Linda's personality was one of quiet, but reliable servitude, not so much selling to customers.
Through apptitude and necessity, Linda soon found herself getting thrust into all aspects of an expanding business. In the early 80's, La Crosse Floral had 18 greenhouses and 75,000 square feet of growing space including wholesale, retail and corporate contracts with large buinesses in town, multiple churches and funeral homes. Her hard work, and an abrupt change to the business hierarchy, eventually led to being promoted into management. That had its own challenges, of course -- hiring and firing employees is never easy, and finding someone who wants to stand on their feet all day in hot and humid conditions was difficult. Extremes in weather and maintaining greenhouse equipment led to many sleepless nights. Sometimes it was easier to sleep at the greenhouse rather than drive over at 2:00 in the morning to start the furnace when the temperature dipped below freezing.
I don't know of too many people who would get out of a warm bed, get into a cold car, drive to work and turn on a furnace. As a matter of fact, I only know of one. My sister.
It was that kind of dedication the Zoerb family saw in her when John Zoerb gave her more and more responsibilities.
Family. It's a term floated around La Crosse Floral by employees and customers alike - - and in the conversation I'm having with Linda -- it anchors this story, and explains why she has remained with the business through more than four decades.
La Crosse Floral was incorporated in 1908. A few years later, beginning with Carl Zoerb in 1916,and again in 1930, the Zoerb family's association with the business was fortified with shared family values. Hans, John, Richard, Fritz and Linda Zoerb all had a hand in growing -- pun intended -- the business. Each generation put sustainability, shared values and a strong emotional commitment to the company's legacy, to provide La Crosse with exceptional service and a product that was better than the competition.
It was not easy, as most family interactions can sometimes be messy and unpredictable. But with over 100 years of experience, knowledge and community connections people knew who to call for floral arrangements for formals, weddings, funerals and plantscaping. They provided plants and flowers for some of the biggest names in La Crosse: First Federal Bank, Dairyland Power and Trane Company.
It's one reason why La Crosse Floral was named as one of the top "100 Revolutionary Garden Centers of North America by Today's Garden Center magazine in 2014.
Which brings us back to Linda and her growing expertise in planning months in advance for daisies, geraniums, poinsettias, lillies and mums. She says her biggest challenge was always having the desired flower in bloom when the season arrived. She's much too modest to agree with me, but if they handed out most valuable player awards at La Crosse Floral, she would have a shelf full of them. Being able able to read nickle defenses and blitzing linebackers in football is much easier than trying to control when poinsettias and lillies will bloom for the holidays. You have to be able to control the amount of sunlight, day and nightime temperatures and moisture when the means of providing all of that is constantly changing.
Not only does the weather vary, but so does planning for a holiday like Easter when it can come early or late iin the year. But don't expect the customer to understand -- they just want their flowers in time to enjoy.