Skip to Main Content

News

Dream Farm and the beauty of flowers

Feb 11 2024

SST students and faculty visited Dream Farm, a flower producing facility in Guayllabamba, a small town 45 minutes north from Quito. We learned that the business of flowers is a huge source of revenue for the area, specially before Valentine’s Day, Mother’s Day, Halloween, and Saint Patrick’s Day since their main consumers are in the US. These flowers are appreciated for their long shelf life which is attributed to the mineral mixture of the natural soil of Guayallabamba and the care of Ecuadorians.

The discarded rosebuds offer a frail beauty to the eye. I am sure there is a metaphor there, but I don’t yet know for what.

Joanna, our tour guide and HR director at Dream Farm, explained that the name came from the dream that the owners, three siblings, had of bringing flowers to the world. She also mentioned that some rosebuds are cut before they open to not overload each plant, this allows viable ones to reach markets in full boom.

Rosebushes are kept in green houses where temperature, humidity and nutrition are regularly monitored. This is Joanna’s favorite color.

 

 

At the end of the tour, we all got flowers. Most gave them to their host families because “who doesn’t like flowers?”

 

  • Directors’ Corner

    Goshen College’s “SST for all” makes global education more accessible with flexible study options at home and abroad.

  • Nurturing Reciprocity in SST Relationships

    Goshen College builds SST reciprocity with Ecuador through campus visits and solar projects that support local communities.

  • Sequential SST Broadens Student Choices

    Goshen College’s sequential SST courses take students from India’s Himalayas to Detroit, exploring ecology, resilience and community renewal.