
Make memories. Save money.
Order dahlias for your DIY wedding today!
Photo Credit Jorge Garcia Photography
Planning a wedding in New Jersey, New York, or Pennsylvania this fall?
When our fields are in full bloom this August and September, come bring home buckets of stunning, as-fresh-as-they-come dahlias ready for arrangement for your wedding.
Wedding arrangements cost an average of $2,800. Arrange your own using our dahlias instead and save thousands in your wedding budget!
Shop our available cut dahlias by color below to match the vision you have for your wedding and see our guide for how to DIY your flowers. We have lots of tips and tricks for DIY brides!
Call Emma at 303-929-6386 today with any questions we can help answer for you as your prepare to put together your own stunning arrangements!
“Being able to use flowers from our garden, your local farm, and the garden beds of our family and friends made it so sentimental. It was also SO budget-friendly… I had so much fun and I recommend this route to everyone in my life who's engaged. Flower gardening and arranging is so good for the soul!”
- Arielle, September 2024 Bride
Photo Credit: Ronnie Mae Photography LLC
Dahlia Bloom Buckets
Shop your blooms by color family
Bucketfuls of blooms
Your flowers will be cut the day before or the morning-of your pickup, so they will be as fresh as they come! Each bucket is packed to bursting with your chosen colors of dahlias and will be ready for you to take and create your own arrangements!
We know that DIYing wedding flowers is a big task, but with showstopper dahlias and a good instructional guide, you can plan for a stress-free and fun flower arranging day! We have put together a helpful guide with tutorials on everything we learned from arranging our flowers with minimal experience for our wedding last year! Arranging flowers yourself can help make room in your wedding budget and can be a truly memorable, exciting, and fun part of final preparations for the big day!

Flowers grown with love by our family to celebrate the beginning of yours.
Photo Credit Jorge Garcia Photography
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Are dahlias perennials?In warm climates where the ground does not freeze, yes, dahlias are perennials and they will come back every year. However, if you live in a cold place you will need to dig them up and store them inside each year, or cover/insulate them if you leave them in the ground. Otherwise, the tubers will freeze and turn to mush. Fun fact: Every spring here in NJ (where we have very cold winters), dozens of "blind" tubers sprout from our compost pile. This goes to show two things: compost piles stay warm all winter; and even the the pros miss and eye every once in a while!
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I'm not sure if my tuber is viable to grow. What should I do?We try to make sure we give our growers the best chance of having beautiful blooms, and with an expert eye-spotting team and pre-sprouted tubers, chances are your tuber will wake up and grow! Sometimes the eyes still take a little time to wake up or the sprouts can get snapped off before shipping, so we always ask that you give yours a little bit of time to grow before reaching out to us (since shipping season is when we are the busiest!) If you received a tuber that you are unsure is viable, please do the following: - Take a few clear photos or a video of the entire tuber right away! We can't help you as well as we'd like to unless we have photos of the tuber in question. - Pot the tuber up in a warm sunny place in soil, (like a sunny windowsill inside) with the crown (the part with the growth point) sticking just out of the soil, and keep the soil moist but not soaked with water. Any potting soil will do! Most of the time when we do that, we’ll start to see the sleepy sprouts pop up within a week or two. If you still don't see anything starting to grow 2 weeks after potting the tuber up: - Take another updated photo or video of the tuber - Fill out THIS FORM including the original photo and the updated photo, the tuber variety name, your order number, and any other details of concern We have many examples of folks having good success waiting just a few more weeks for a sprout, so we appreciate your patience with this process!
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When or how often should I water my dahlia tubers?You should make sure you are planting your tubers in moist but not saturated soil. After planting, don’t water until you see a sprout of about an inch or so above ground, since overwatering before this can cause the tuber to rot. Dahlia tubers have plenty of water in them already! Once you see a sprout a couple inches tall you can begin watering regularly, whenever the soil is dry.
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How are dahlias classified?Dahlias are classified with three major categories: size, form, and color. The American Dahlia Society has a great succinct photographic guide you can see for free here. Knowing what particular dahlia forms you like can help you search for new varieties without knowing specific names. Dahliaaddict.com has an awesome search feature here which allows you to look for dahlias available to buy right at this moment which have your favorite characteristics. For example, are you looking for medium (6 to 8”), informal decoratives in red? You can find a list of farmers with those for sale on the Dahlia Addict database. Our own website now also has a search by classification feature to make it easier for you to find the kinds of dahlias you like best. You can find it on our main shop page here.
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How do I find the eyes on my dahlias?The “eye” on a dahlia is a growth point, similar to eyes on a potato. But unlike potatoes, Dahlia eyes occur only on the crown of a tuber, the spot where each individual tuber attaches to the main stalk of the plant. If a tuber does not have an eye (if it’s a “blind” tuber) it’ll never grow anything. You can chuck that baby! Or if you’re brave, make tuber french fries out of it. We’ve heard Cafe au Lait tubers in particular are tolerably tasty. It can be extremely difficult finding eyes most of the time. The best case scenario is if you have a killing frost, then the temperature warms up over the next week or two before harvest. The frost will kill the stalk, then the eyes on the tubers will start to swell or even regrow tiny little shoots which makes dividing them a lot easier. Another option is to store your tubers as clumps, then wake them up one-two months before it's time to replant, so the eyes start to swell. Some tubers take up to three months to eye up nicely. Others will wake up within two weeks. Most are wide awake within one-two months of returning to 60-70 degree temperatures. There are many video tutorials online for finding dahlia eyes, but they’re tough to see even in the best videos. It can be really helpful to take a few undivided clumps out of storage quite early, pot them with the crowns sticking up above ground (they won’t dehydrate) and watch them wake up. You’ll be able to see in real time whether or not something you thought was an eye really was.
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How long do dahlias take to wake up (How long do dahlias take to show visible eyes)?Every variety is different. Some tubers will show visible eyes within two weeks of being “woken up,” that is, moved to warmer temperatures. Some take two months to show any signs of life, or even longer!
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How and when do I wake up my dahlia tubers?The simplest way to wake up dahlias is just to move them from cold storage to a warmer environment. Room temperature is fine. If your storage solution is well designed, you don't even need to transfer the tubers to dirt or pots. Just move them! At Sunset View Farm we start waking ours up in the beginning of March by taking them indoors from our unheated, attached garage (about 40 degrees) to room temperatures (about 68 degrees) so they are all very nicely eyed up or even sprouting by the time we ship in mid-April. That lets people in warmer climates get them right in the ground as soon as they arrive. We're in northern NJ so we don't plant our own until mid-late May, but it doesn't hurt the tubers at all to have been awakened early. The worst case is you just snip off an over-eager sprout and plant the tuber as normal - it'll grow several more sprouts back promptly. This timeline applied to your situation: take your tubers to warmer temperatures 4-6 weeks before you expect to plant them outdoors.
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Do I need to support / how should I support dahlia plants?Dahlias usually need support or they will fall over and either break or continue growing with bent stems which are useless for bouquets. There are several different ways to support them, including: corralling, staking, and netting. If you have only a few plants, individually staking plants is the best way to go. Use whatever you have: bamboo, wooden stakes, rebar, etc, and loosely tie the plants to the stake. If you have a row or two, corralling works great. Corralling involves tying twine or rope around stakes placed at the outer edge of your row. This keeps plants from falling down away from the row, but you’ll need to make sure the plants are spaced close enough so that they can support each other within the row. If you have many rows, netting is our method of choice. We use Hortonova Trellis netting, purchased in large rolls which cost (as of 2022) about $6 per 60 feet. We run 60 foot rows, with 4’ of growing area in each row. Instead of wooden stakes we use 10 3/8” rebar (more expensive than wood, but lasts forever), 4’ high, placed at each end of the row and at intervals of 15’ on either side of the row. From there we roll out the netting over the rebar stakes, which when properly spaced will give the plastic enough tension to hold itself up without any additional ties. In our opinion, netting is easier to set up, adjust, and take down than any of the other methods! We get our netting from Johnny’s seeds.
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How do I take dahlia cuttings?The American Dahlia Society has a great succinct guide on taking dahlia cuttings, but read on for our take: Taking cuttings is an easy way to get more bang for your buck and grow your collection faster. Healthy plants grown from rooted cuttings will produce blooms and flowers just like a plant grown from a tuber. To take cuttings, make sure you wake up your tubers two-three months earlier than you would normally plant them (we sometimes start 5 months in advance, but we’re overachievers). Some tubers take up to two months to start producing shoots. Some will wake up in a couple weeks. To wake up your tubers, place them in damp potting soil straight up, with the crown exposed. Don’t overwater! The soil should stay slightly damp, never soaked, and never bone-dry. Put the tubers in a warm place. Grow lights are optional at this point. Once the eyes start to swell, make sure the tubers are getting adequate light. Let the shoots grow to at least two inches, then cut the shoot at the base with a sharp knife. Don’t cut into the crown, or you’ll remove the growth point and no other shoots will form. There are several ways to root the cuttings after this point: You can leave them in a glass of water in a warm sunny place (old-fashioned method); you can put them directly into pots with soil that’s kept well-watered; or you can use a growing medium like vermiculite or coconut coir in a 72-cell tray, or similar set up. In any of these mediums, the key components are heat, moisture, and light. Keep the plants about 70 degrees or warmer. Ensure they always have enough water and keep them in a relatively humid environment. And make sure they get 12-14 hours of light per day (dahlias begin growing tubers when day length is under 10 hours, which you don’t want to happen before you plant them outside). With any of these methods, roots can take from one to four weeks to form. Rooting hormone is not necessary, but it sometimes helps speed up the process. Dry or Gel works fine (we use Garden Safe brand). We have tried all three methods and all of them work. The old-fashioned method (rooting in a glass of water) is by far the easiest and simplest if you only plan to take a few cuttings. If you are taking many cuttings and need space efficiency and organization, we recommend you use a 72-cell tray with a water bath and heat mat. If you have lots of space, then you can go ahead and root cuttings in larger pots, just make sure they are kept warm to encourage the rooting process to take place.
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How long will it take a dahlia cutting to bloom?Healthy rooted cuttings will grow, bloom, and produce tubers just like a tuber planted in the ground. Every variety is a little different but generally dahlias take about 8 weeks to bloom after planting.
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How do I store dahlias over the winter?The million dollar question! Everybody has a favorite method. Here are a few methods in brief: Wrap each tuber in plastic wrap and store in your refrigerator crisper Store in peat moss in a cardboard box in a cool, dark, damp place. Store in vermiculite in a plastic tub with a lid in a cool, dark place. Store without storage medium in a five-gallon bucket covered with newsprint in a cool dark place. However you do it, consider these key factors: Temperature, humidity, and air flow. Temperature Dahlias should be stored at about 40 degrees. A little colder or a little warmer is ok, but if they freeze, they’ll die, and if they get too warm, humidity and rot become a problem. A garage, crawlspace, or cold basement often works well. Humidity Dahlias gain and lose moisture in cycles in response to their environment, so they need to be kept in a somewhat damp atmosphere (think how damp the ground is, where dahlias in warmer climates naturally overwinter). To facilitate this, most people use a storage medium. A storage medium has two jobs: it keeps tubers from losing too much moisture, and it absorbs excess moisture respirated over the winter. Most beginners seem to have the best luck with peat moss as a storage medium. The trick is to check it frequently (every two-four weeks) and add moisture if it gets too dry, or leave your storage containers open to airflow if it gets too damp. Air flow Speaking of airflow, you’ll need a container to store your dahlias. Most people store them in plastic buckets or tubs with a lid, filled with a storage medium, since that offers the most control. However, if you have a particularly humid and cold environment relatively safe from critters (like the classic root cellar) you can even use a plain old cardboard box with soil.
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How does Sunset View Farm store our dahlias?We store our dahlias in an attached, unheated garage that stays at about 40 degrees most of the winter. We heat with propane on the rare day the temperature is in danger of dropping below freezing. Our tubers are washed, divided, washed again, and air dried before being placed in bulb crates lined with a plastic bag (the kind with small ventilation holes seems to do best. They are sold as bulb crate liners). We leave the bag open on top and stuff recycled newsprint over the top of the crate, which blocks air entry/egress while absorbing excess humidity, especially during the first few weeks of storage. We do not use any storage medium at all other than the newsprint on top of the tubers. Home gardeners can use buckets or open plastic bins instead of crates with liners. With this method it’s very important to check tubers a couple weeks after initial storage to make sure there is no excess moisture or condensation stuck in the container. If there is, remove the newspaper, allow water to evaporate from the container and tubers, then replace the paper on top. After the first two weeks check, we check tubers every month for moisture build-up. This method works like a charm for us. You can replicate this method at home with five gallon buckets instead of bulb crates and liners. One year we stored 12,000 dahlias in buckets before we made the switch to crates, which are more space efficient.
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My tubers have some mold or fuzz on them after winter storage. Will they grow?It's good to remember (we forget ourselves sometimes) that though the flowers are so gorgeous, and we package up the tubers in pretty boxes, the tubers themselves at the end of the day are roots that go in the ground, and all sorts of things grow on them. As long as the eye is there and the tuber is still firm, a little fuzz or black mold won’t hurt anything. They'll grow beautiful flowers. If you're still concerned about a particular tuber, squeeze it firmly to check for hollow-rot. If it's questionably firm, snip off the bottom third. If the tuber is healthy, this won't hurt it. If it's beginning to rot from the inside out, this will reveal the problem.
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What’s the best way to ship dahlia tubers?Dahlias are not terribly fussy to ship. The key is to ship them early in the season when temperatures are cool but not freezing. Ideally, this should be true both for your region and the destination. However, most places in the US are generally safe to ship to by mid-April so long as the recipient is on the lookout for the box and never lets it sit outside overnight. Ship dahlias in a microcosm of your successful winter storage environment. If you stored your dahlias in bins with peat moss, ship them in ziplock bags in the same peat moss. If you stored them with no growing medium in crates or buckets topped with newsprint (like we do), ship them the same way. Use the smallest box they’ll fit in and make sure there is plenty of padding. Wood shavings and newsprint (our favorite) work best. Loose peat moss or potting soil tend to spill out during shipping, making a mess and reducing the efficacy of your padding. When the box is all packed, give it a gentle shake. There should be nothing at all rattling around. If shipped at the right time of year and packaged properly, dahlias do not need to be shipped priority or overnight. Economy shipping works just fine (wholesale dahlias are shipped in bulk from overseas growers and stored in crates for months at a time - yours will do fine in the mail for a few days).
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How long do dahlias last in the vase / What is the vase life of dahlias?Dahlias last a very long time on the stem, and the plants keep producing blooms as often as you cut the old ones. However, like many other bold, lush flowers, dahlias have a shorter vase life than more spare blooms. How long your dahlias last depend on the variety, on conditions at harvest, and on how you display them, but in good conditions, a good rule of thumb is 5-7 days. The Seattle wholesale growers market has an absolutely fantastic resource on vase life by variety. Definitely check that out!
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How does gall spread?Leafy Gall is generally unmistakable – there are a lot of good examples here. It helps to understand a little better how gall spreads. It’s a disease of opportunity! It spreads through contaminated fluids from one plant to another through a wound, like cutting tools, shovels, pitchforks, etc. The disease won’t spread just from two undamaged tubers being in contact with each other in shipment, or even through the soil in normal conditions. It works kind of similarly to how the common wart is spread in humans. You can shake hands with someone who has one, and unless the wart is bleeding or otherwise open, AND you have an open cut on your hand, no transmission of the virus will occur. What we suggest do do if you're concerned: pot the tuber in question up in damp potting soil in a sunny place with the crown sticking out and watch it continue to grow for a couple of weeks. You’ll know for sure as it continues to mature.
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When will fall-shipped tubers arrive?Fall-shipped tubers typically arrive in late November to early December. Please check our shop page for this year's dates.
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When will spring-shipped tubers arrive?Spring shipped tubers typically arrive in April, regardless of recipient's agricultural zone. Please check our shop page this year's dates.
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How do I purchase Fall shipping?There are two ways to upgrade to fall shipping. AT CHECKOUT: If you are placing your first order of the season Shop as normal, then at checkout, select "Fall shipping" as your shipping option. That's it! AS AN UPGRADE: If you would like to switch from spring shipping to fall shipping If you have already placed an order where you selected spring shipping, you can purchase the Fall Shipping Upgrade for $5 separately in a second order. For 2025, whether you purchase fall shipping up front or add it on later, total shipping cost will be $13 + $5 = $18 for fall shipped orders. Unless you call or email us, if you have selected fall shipping on any of your orders, we will assume all orders you place before the fall shipping window has passed are orders you want delivered in the fall. Any new orders you place after your box has been shipped in the fall will be delivered in spring.
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What's your guarantee on orders shipped in the fall?We will of course replace any tuber that was not viable upon arrival, either through our mistake or through frost exposure, or if it's discovered to be mislabeled in the spring (This is extremely rare but it does happen!). After your receipt of healthy tubers we cannot issue any refunds, replacements or credits for any reason for Fall shipped orders. You are responsible for the safe overwintering and subsequent care of your order. You must contact us within three days of receipt of your package, as confirmed by package tracking! We cannot replace any tubers that are damaged as a result of exposure after successful delivery or failure to immediately store after arrival.
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What is the Fall shipping window for 2025?Boxes will be shipped no earlier than November 17th and no later than December 8th.
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How will my dahlias be packed?Fall-shipped dahlias will be packed in a box with natural fiber insulation and a 72 hour heat pack, via 3-day mail, either USPS or UPS.
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Wait! What if I don't want Fall shipping?Don't worry, the only way someone's order will be shipped in the fall is if they purchase the shipping upgrade. If you don't do that, your order will ship in the spring as normal.
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I already placed an order - can I change it to fall shipping?Yes! If you have already placed an order (or multiple orders), just purchase the fall shipment upgrade on our website. Please be careful to use exactly the same shipping and email address you used for all previous orders, or your orders may not be combined. If you've placed multiple orders and want them all shipped in the fall, you only need to purchase one fall shipping upgrade.
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Can I get some tubers shipped now, and others sent in spring?Yes! If you purchase fall shipping, any tubers you've ordered prior to the fall shipment date will go out in the fall. If you place any additional orders after fall shipments have left our doors, an additional shipping charge will apply, since the order will be sent separately in the spring.
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How come more sellers don't offer this?Very few sellers offer fall shipping, for a variety of reasons. You may be surprised to learn that "tubers don't like cold" is not the biggest one. Since packages are in temperature controlled environments most of the way, most shipments in fall would likely be totally fine with no extra precautions (heat packs, faster shipping speed, insulation, etc) until the box is dropped outside at the customer's door. The biggest reason people don't offer fall shipping is that they simply can't finish the harvest in time to do it. Processing dahlias is a ton of labor, and most flower farmers have a million other things to do in the fall. Many operations wait until the spring to divide; most take their time and do it slowly over the winter. We, however, have gotten pretty good at putting together a great seasonal team to finish the harvest quickly, which means we can get the tubers to you earlier than almost anyone else!
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What's the benefit of Fall shipping?Some growers in warmer climates would prefer to have their tubers on hand much sooner than spring shipping typically allows. Others like to wake their tubers up early for indoor pre-potting or taking cuttings.
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Is there any difference in tubers shipped in Fall vs Spring?Functionally, no! The main difference you might notice in fall shipped tubers from our farm is that there maybe fewer actively growing sprouts, since the plants will have been recently killed off by frost here in NJ. When we ship in the spring, we warm our tubers up early, so that many of them are already sprouting by the time they reach you! We do not do that for fall shipped tubers, since many people will be putting these guys right to bed upon receipt. If temperatures are warm after the first killing frost, some fall shipped tubers will have put out new sprouts. However, most will have eyes that are in various stages from very swollen to visible, but dormant.
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I'm new to dahlias - should I take Fall shipment?No, probably not! If you have little or no experience with overwintering, we'd advise you not to take fall shipment. Even when you do everything right, a certain percentage of tubers still rot, shrivel, mold, get eaten by critters, or otherwise spoil in storage every year. We'd recommend new growers try overwintering with "free" tubers you grew yourself before attempting it with purchased tubers. However, nothing ventured, nothing gained. If you have your heart set on it, you can always try it. The safest way for a new grower to have success with your investment during your first overwintering is to wake your tubers up early and take cuttings, maybe even for most of the winter. This is because while you're taking cuttings, you're actively observing, watering, and caring for your plants.
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Why does Fall shipping cost extra?The Fall shipping upgrade fee will be in addition to the regular shipping calculated at checkout. The upgrade will cover the cost of additional packaging, heat packs, expedited shipping, and significant labor cost required for successful fulfillment in November. We have invested quite a lot of time in figuring out how to offer you the lowest possible shipping rates. Many, if not most, sellers simply offer expensive flat rate USPS boxes. This makes their lives easier at fulfillment (we totally get that!) but passes on an additional cost to you, the consumer. We've spent many hours figuring out the most cost efficient way to package and ship tubers safely to save you as much as possible. We are also happy to offer free combined shipping which is one of the most requested but most difficult parts of tuber fulfillment. As a result, our average spring-shipped order costs significantly less than most other sellers, and our average Fall-shipped order will cost only a couple dollars more than most sellers' spring shipped boxes that have none of the costlier special considerations for cool weather shipping.
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I don't see eyes on the tubers I just receivedIf you can't spot the eyes on your dahlias, please send us a video and/or photos immediately using our customer service form, and give us a call once you have, so we can look at the media together and help you find the eyes. If we can't see a viable eye either, we will refund, credit or replace the tuber. You must contact us within three days of receipt of your order! We cannot replace tubers that do not sprout in the spring.
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What if my Fall-shipped tubers don't survive the winter?The most heartbreaking thing! We know. Every year, a certain percentage of tubers do not survive storage, even when you do everything right. When you order Spring shipments of tubers from farmers like us, we shoulder the burden of winter storage for you. In the rare event of storage failure, we issue refunds or substitutions as you direct us to, and you are taken care of. When you take Fall shipment, you shoulder the risk of winter storage. We cannot offer refunds or replacements for healthy tubers which shrivel, get lost, mold, rot, get munched on, or otherwise do not survive the winter under your care.

What to expect on pickup day
Pick up at Sunset View Farm, and see the fields in bloom for yourself!
Each order will be hand cut for you before you arrive! Your Bloom Buckets will be stored in the temperature-controlled flower room in our red barn, ready for you to take and begin arranging. You'll have an email from us confirming the time of your pickup and any special requests in your order!
Address:
27 Pierce Road Andover, NJ 07848
Please note: Enter at the gravel drive, not the house driveway! :)
Contact:
Call or Text Emma at 303-929-6386
Email Emma at emma@sunsetviewfarm.com