Remember the wedding of Hillary Gottemoeller and Joe Harris in Roosevelt Center back in 2015? Thought so! They’ll be returning to their wedding venue this Saturday, when they perform for the Crazy Quilt Festival, organized again by Joe.
But this blog post is about Wollam Gardens,the cut-flower farm in Virginia where the couple now divide their time (with a home base in Greenbelt). It’s about 60 miles west of D.C.
I visited Wollam Gardens recently to see the farm that’s competing with Old Greenbelt for their time, and because I could write about it for my garden blog (and here, too!) Let’s start with how Hillary and Joe ended up there.
It began when Hillary explored a career change (from publishing, content management, and client relations) and was accepted into the 10-week internship program at Wollam Gardens, after which time she knew she didn’t want to leave. Since then she’s been full-time business manager and floral designer there for two seasons.
Above, where Hillary and Joe live while at the farm.
The story of Wollam Gardens starts with Bob Wollam himself, who’s so photogenic I couldn’t choose just one photo of him (from their Instagram account).
When Bob retired from Exxon in 1987 he moved from Texas to D.C. because of our four seasons plus mildish winters where he could pursue his dream of growing ornamental plants. (His mother and grandmother were big gardeners in New York and Ohio, and he grew to love flowers.)
By 1988 he’d bought 11 acres and rented 9 more within a 1.5-hour drive of D.C. and had begun selling perennial plants. After visiting a “cut-your-own-flowers” farm he switched to cut flowers.
I didn’t get to meet Bob when I was there but learned a lot about him by listening to a podcast interview with him by the founder of the Slow Flowers movement (recorded while driving from DC to the farm). He explained that he learned to run a cut-flower business by joining and getting advice from the Association of Specialty Cut Flower Growers, of which he’s a big fan. The association has grown quickly to over 1,000 members, and Bob is happy to help it “grow more flower farmers,” even competitors.
What flowers does he grow? Bob describes the farm’s specialty as “flowers that are difficult to grow and difficult to ship.” I wonder if that includes woodies, because flowering shrubs are a big part of the business, from the looks of it. Bob says his favorite woody is Quince, but Hydrangeas and Viburnums must be high on his list because there are fields of them.
I was told that Bob brags about there being more Viburnum macrocephalum at Wollam than anywhere else, plus several other viburnums. It’s all the mature shrubs, with their flowers, foliage, berries and branches, that give the farm a nice advantage over newer flower farms. Currently, the farm grows 80 varieties of plants.
Wollam is big on dahlias, too, which for several years now have overwintered successfully in the ground.
The farm’s 2,000 mature peonies still looked good despite recent storms, and on the day I visited customers were arriving for a Pick-a-Peony event.
Because it’s too expensive to heat hoop houses with propane, their only heating fuel, the farm shuts down operations from mid-December to the end of February.
Wollam Gardens has a nice diversity of income streams:
- Selling at six farmers markets, including the Dupont Circle Market that Bob co-founded and is now the largest in the area. To sample their wares, click here for their schedule of farmers market appearances.
- Delivering to florists in the DC and Baltimore markets and to “select” Whole Foods in the area. (Bob said he’s “the local flower child to Whole Foods.”)
- Weddings! Brides are finding the garden through The Knot and from flyers distributed at farmers markets.
- And since their lovely pavilion was built two years ago, Wollam Garden has become an event venue, hosting 13 weddings the very first year (including Bob’s own!) and 20 this year.
The pavilion house has spawned a variety of other events, including weekly yoga classes and a Fall Festival with music, food, workshops, a farm tour, and flower-crown-making (very popular).
Finally, I visited the farmhouse on the property, plenty old enough for an “old house nut” like Bob, having begun in 1747 as a log cabin that was added onto in 1819. The six seasonal interns live there, as room and board are part of their pay (plus $30/day). There are also two guest rooms rented out through Airbnb, so you can stay there!
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