Hawaii is one of the best places on Earth to grow tropical cut flowers and foliage. Ginger and heliconia thrive in our heat and humidity with minimal inputs, and eucalyptus โ managed right โ produces the silver-dollar foliage that florists love year-round. This guide covers all three crops we grow at Wailupe Farms for the local market.
๐ด Ginger
Ornamental gingers are among Hawaii's signature cut flowers. They're practically bulletproof in our climate, require minimal pest management compared to most crops, and produce stems that last 1โ3 weeks in a vase. The three main species grown for cut flowers at Wailupe Farms:
Torch Ginger (Etlingera elatior)
The showstopper. Waxy, cone-shaped flower heads in deep red or pink on leafless stems that can reach 5โ6 feet. Torch ginger is actually a separate stalk from the foliage โ the flowering stems emerge directly from the base. A single established clump can produce stems continuously once it reaches maturity.
- Time to first flower: 18โ24 months from rhizome planting.
- Spacing: 6โ8 feet โ these are large plants. Plan for permanent beds.
- Sun: Full to partial shade. Does well under large trees or on the edge of a forest margin.
- Water: Likes consistent moisture but tolerates short dry periods once established.
- Harvest: Cut when the bract is fully colored and tight. If it starts to open or show small white flowers at the tip, it's slightly past peak but still saleable. Cut at ground level, as close to the base as possible for maximum stem length.
- Vase life: 14โ21 days with proper conditioning.
Red Ginger (Alpinia purpurata)
The most common cut ginger in Hawaii. Upright stems with bright red (or pink) cone-shaped bracts at the top. Fast-growing, reliable, and easier to establish than torch ginger. Popular at farmers markets and with florists for tropical arrangements.
- Time to first flower: 12โ16 months from rhizome.
- Spacing: 3โ4 feet. More compact than torch ginger.
- Sun: Full sun to partial shade. More sun = more flowers.
- Water: Regular watering, mulch heavily to retain moisture.
- Harvest: Cut stems when the top third of the flower head is showing full color, before tiny plantlets (keikis) develop at the flower tip โ keikis signal the bract is past prime for cut flower use.
- After harvest: Cut the spent stem to the base to encourage new growth from the rhizome. Each stalk flowers once, then dies back. New shoots constantly emerge from the expanding rhizome clump.
Shell Ginger (Alpinia zerumbet)
Cascading chains of pink-and-white shell-shaped flowers with a waxy appearance and light fragrance. More ornamental than the other gingers, often used as accent stems in arrangements. The variegated-leaf form (A. zerumbet 'Variegata') is also highly valued as foliage for tropical floral design.
- Time to first flower: 12โ18 months.
- Spacing: 3โ5 feet. Dense clumps once established.
- Harvest: Cut when 50โ75% of the flowers on the chain are open. Full open = shorter vase life.
- Foliage value: The long, arching variegated leaves are separately saleable as tropical greens.
Planting & Care (All Gingers)
- Planting: Plant rhizomes 3โ4 inches deep, eye facing up, in well-amended beds. Rich organic matter is key โ gingers are heavy feeders.
- Fertilizer: Monthly application of balanced organic fertilizer or aged manure. Gingers respond well to high-nitrogen feeding during establishment, then balanced NPK once flowering.
- Mulch: 4โ6 inches of mulch is one of the highest-leverage things you can do. Holds moisture, suppresses weeds, feeds the rhizomes as it breaks down.
- Division: Divide clumps every 3โ5 years to rejuvenate production and propagate new plants. Divide with a sharp spade in early morning, replant immediately.
- Pests: Generally low-maintenance. Watch for grasshoppers on new shoots and root rot in poorly drained soils. Spider mites in very dry conditions.
Post-Harvest Conditioning
- Cut stems in the early morning when temperatures are coolest.
- Immediately place in a bucket of clean water โ don't let stems sit in air.
- Re-cut stems underwater at an angle before placing in final vase water.
- Remove any leaves that will fall below the waterline.
- Keep in a cool, shaded location away from direct sun and ethylene sources (fruit).
- Change water every 2โ3 days.
๐ฆ Heliconia
Heliconia is the tropical flower โ bold, architectural, and unmistakably Hawaiian. The waxy bracts (not true flowers) come in reds, oranges, and yellows and hold their color for weeks. Heliconia is a significant export crop from Hawaii to the mainland and Japan, and has strong local demand from hotels, florists, and event designers.
Best Species for Waimanalo
- Heliconia psittacorum (Parrot heliconia) โ the most compact and fastest-producing species. Stems 2โ4 feet, narrow orange-red bracts. Excellent for market because of shorter production cycle and continuous flowering. Best for small plots.
- Heliconia caribaea โ tall (8โ12 ft), large dramatic bracts in red/yellow. The classic "big heliconia" for hotel lobbies and event work. Needs more space and time to establish.
- Heliconia stricta โ medium-sized, compact, reliable producer. Many cultivars. Good market flower.
- Heliconia rostrata (Hanging lobster claw) โ the pendant-flowering form. Bracts hang downward in a striking chain. Highly sought after by florists for its unusual form. Needs some shade in full Waimanalo sun.
Planting
- Rhizomes: Plant with at least one healthy eye, 4โ6 inches deep. Obtain from local Hawaii nurseries (Plant Group Hawaii, local farm network) โ do not import.
- Spacing: 4โ6 feet for psittacorum types; 8โ12 feet for large caribaea. They spread aggressively once established โ plan for their eventual footprint.
- Soil: Rich, well-amended, well-drained. Heliconia hates waterlogged roots. Raised or mounded beds work well in Waimanalo's heavier soils.
- Sun: Most species want full sun to light shade. H. rostrata does better with afternoon shade in our climate.
- Establishment: Water regularly for the first 6 months. Once the rhizome system is established, heliconias are drought-tolerant but perform better with consistent water.
Fertilizing & Mulching
Heliconias are moderate feeders. Monthly application of balanced fertilizer or aged compost during the growing season. Heavy mulching (4โ6 inches) is the single most impactful management practice โ it mimics forest floor conditions, retains moisture, and as it decomposes feeds the expanding rhizome system.
Harvesting
- Harvest in the early morning when temperatures are coolest and stems are most hydrated.
- Timing: Cut when 1โ2 bracts are showing full color but before tiny true flowers inside the bracts are fully open. This maximizes vase life.
- Cut stems as long as possible โ florists pay premium for long stems. Angle-cut at the base.
- Immediately place in water. Heliconia wilts fast if stems are in air.
- After cutting: The stalk that just flowered is done โ it won't re-flower. Cut it to the ground to make room for new shoots from the rhizome. This also keeps the clump from getting overcrowded and reduces disease.
Post-Harvest Conditioning
- Re-cut stems at an angle under water.
- Remove lower leaves that would be submerged.
- Condition in clean water in a cool, shaded area for 4โ6 hours before packing or selling.
- Vase life: 14โ21 days. Add floral preservative to extend.
- Keep away from AC vents โ cold air will damage tropical flowers.
Propagation
Divide established clumps every 2โ3 years in early spring. Use a sharp spade to cut rhizome sections with at least one healthy eye and one inch of root. Replant immediately at the same depth. Division rejuvenates production, prevents overcrowding, and gives you new plant stock to expand or sell.
๐ฟ Juvenile Eucalyptus Foliage
Silver-dollar eucalyptus (Eucalyptus cinerea) is one of the most requested foliage crops in the floral industry. The round, silvery-blue juvenile leaves are a staple in wedding floristry, holiday arrangements, and everyday bouquets. The key insight: you don't grow it as a tree โ you manage it as a coppiced shrub to maintain continuous juvenile foliage production.
Why Juvenile Foliage
Eucalyptus goes through two distinct leaf phases. Juvenile leaves are the round, blue-grey "silver dollar" coins that florists want. Adult leaves are long, narrow, and sickle-shaped โ commercially less desirable for cut foliage. If you let the tree grow unchecked, it transitions to adult foliage. Coppicing (cutting back hard) forces the tree to continually regenerate juvenile growth.
Species for Hawaii
- Eucalyptus cinerea (Silver Dollar) โ the florist standard. Round silver-blue leaves, strong aroma. Best for Waimanalo's sea-level conditions with good drainage.
- Eucalyptus gunnii (Cider Gum) โ similar juvenile foliage, slightly more cold-tolerant. Works at higher elevation.
- Eucalyptus pulverulenta (Silver-leaved Mountain Gum) โ very fine silver foliage, highly ornamental. Prefers cooler temps โ better at Koolau-facing elevations than sea-level Waimanalo.
For Waimanalo at sea level, E. cinerea is the safest choice. Start with locally sourced nursery stock or grow from seed.
Planting
- Site: Full sun, excellent drainage. Eucalyptus does not tolerate standing water or waterlogged soils โ this is critical. Plant on a slope, raised bed, or mounded row if your soil drains slowly.
- Spacing: 6โ8 feet for coppiced shrub form. If you let them grow to trees, 15โ20 feet. For cut foliage production, keep them as coppiced shrubs.
- Soil: Eucalyptus is adaptable โ clay, loam, sandy. pH 6.0โ7.5. Doesn't need rich soil; in fact, too much nitrogen produces lush growth prone to disease.
- Planting time: Any time in Hawaii, but avoid planting during extended dry spells without irrigation setup.
- Establishment: Water regularly for the first 3 months until roots establish. Once established, eucalyptus is highly drought-tolerant.
Coppicing โ The Key to Foliage Production
This is what separates a cut foliage operation from a tree planting. Coppicing means cutting the tree back hard to force juvenile regrowth.
- First coppice: When the plant reaches 3โ4 feet (usually 6โ12 months after planting), cut back to 12โ18 inches above ground. Use clean, sharp loppers or a pruning saw. The plant will respond with vigorous multi-stem regrowth โ all juvenile foliage.
- Ongoing coppice cycle: Cut back every 1โ2 years, or whenever stems begin transitioning to adult foliage. Regular coppicing keeps the plant as a productive multi-stem shrub.
- Selective harvesting: Between full coppice cycles, harvest individual stems as they reach harvestable length (18โ24 inches of foliage). This continually stimulates new branching.
Harvesting
- Harvest once foliage is mature and tips are firm โ droopy, soft tips mean the stem isn't ready. Immature stems wilt quickly.
- Cut in the early morning. Immediately place in water.
- Use sharp, clean pruners. Cut just above a node to encourage branching.
- Stem length: florists want 18โ24 inch minimum. Longer is better for wholesale.
- Vase life: 14+ days fresh. Eucalyptus also air-dries beautifully โ hang bundles upside down in a cool, dry area. Dried foliage retains color and aroma for months.
Post-Harvest Conditioning
- Re-cut stems at an angle underwater.
- Remove lower leaves from the bottom third of the stem.
- Place in clean water with floral preservative.
- Allow to hydrate in a cool location for 2โ4 hours before packing or selling.
- For dried eucalyptus: harvest when stems are mature, strip lower leaves, and hang in small bundles in a warm, well-ventilated space. Ready in 2โ3 weeks.
Pests & Problems
- Root rot: The main killer in Hawaii. Ensure excellent drainage. Never overwater established plants.
- Lerp psyllid: Small insects that create sugary "lerp" coverings on leaves. Management: strong water spray, neem oil, or encourage natural predators. Not typically a serious problem in home/farm scale.
- Wind damage: In exposed locations, young trees need staking. Once established, eucalyptus is wind-tolerant.
Market & Selling
Where to Sell
- Farmers markets: KCC, Kailua, Mililani. Cut flowers and tropical foliage sell well, especially bouquet bundles combining multiple crops. Saturday markets tend to be strongest.
- Direct to florists: Build relationships with independent florists on Oahu. Call ahead, bring samples. Florists want consistent supply and consistent quality โ reliability matters more than lowest price.
- Hotels & event venues: Higher volume, more demanding. Start with florists and scale up.
- Roadside/farm stand: Works well in Waimanalo for local traffic.
Pricing Benchmarks (Oahu, 2025)
- Torch ginger: $3โ6/stem retail, $1.50โ3/stem wholesale (depending on stem length and quality)
- Red ginger: $2โ4/stem retail, $1โ2/stem wholesale
- Heliconia (psittacorum): $2โ5/stem; larger species $5โ15/stem for long premium stems
- Eucalyptus foliage: $4โ8/bunch (5 stems) retail; $2โ4/bunch wholesale
- Bundle pricing (mixed tropical bouquet) typically outperforms selling individual stems โ $15โ25 bouquets move well at market.
Presentation
Cut flower buyers respond to presentation. Clean buckets, trimmed stems, remove damaged leaves. A simple kraft paper wrap or rubber-banded bunch looks professional. Add a small tag with the farm name and what the flower is โ customers appreciate knowing what they're buying and where it came from.