There's quite a story behind the Olympic flowers








There's quite a story behind the Olympic flowers



 

After every Olympic event, rather than receiving their medals, athletes are given a bouquet of flowers. At the Beijing Olympics, roses dominated the bouquets. In Turin, it was rhododendrons, azaleas, and camellias. This year, it's green mums and hypericum berries.

The bouquets come from Just Beginnings Flowers and Margitta's Flowers in Surrey, British Columbia. Their entry was chosen from 58 contending florists. June Strandberg, the bouquet designer and owner of Just Beginnings, teaches floristry to women who have left prison, are recovering from addiction, or have been victims of violence. It's a pretty amazing program, and Strandberg has even taken it behind bars, where she educates convicts. She believes it's her work with these correctional programs that secured the Olympic contract.

For the Vancouver Olympics the florists made 1,800 bouquets, 1,707 of which will be given to medal-winning athletes in the Olympics and Paralympics. The flowers are grown locally, but they aren't in season during February, so additional supplies were flown in from Ecuador.

The flowers were chosen to represent British Columbia and Canada, and are intended as keepsakes for the athletes. There are even strict regulations for the bouquets presented at the flower ceremonies. Per IOC protocol, bouquets must be 20 to 30 centimeters tall and about 25 centimeters across.

Though these flowers might look like something you give your mom at a homecoming football game, a lot of thought and planning goes into choosing and making these bouquets. When you consider the societal benefits behind these flowers, it almost makes the bouquets as valuable as the medals.



Article: HERE



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Comments

  • 2/18/2010 12:17 AM gucci wrote:
    Shame on me, but I've never paid attention to the flowers, given to the winners of the Olympic games. But the fact that Just Beginnings Flowers Society cares to give job to the women, who have different problems, was even a greater surprise for me. I think that this really makes the bouquets as precious as the medals.
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  • 2/18/2010 3:17 AM Flowers wrote:
    wow....these olympic flowers looks awesome. Thanks for sharing it. It was nice going through your blog.
    Reply to this
  • 2/19/2010 10:32 AM allison wrote:
    These are BLAH!!! They are not colorful enough and therefore do no show well on T.V.! All floral designers know that green is a recessive color. Whatever . . . But it would be nice to be able to actually see the beauty of the bouquets!!
    Reply to this
  • 3/7/2010 4:18 AM Christine McClintock wrote:
    I like the concept behind these flowers. I support the initive of what they were doing, but please could they have made them at least attractive? They have their own strange beauty, please don't get me wrong. I agree with Allison. We never really got to see them because they looked like a bunch of green being held. They did not show well to a t.v. audience. Hopefully, they did mean the most to the women who made them, and the people who received them. To us...they were an eye sore.
    Reply to this
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