Farwest Show

Aug 31, 2022
2022 Farwest Show Helps Green Industry Connect

The 2022 Farwest Show, held Aug. 24-26, helped green industry professionals connect with each other, whether as exhibitors or attendees, according to organizers.

“This year’s Farwest Show was upbeat,” said Allan Niemi, events director for the Oregon Association of Nurseries, which produces the show. “People told us they had positive conversations on the floor, met new people, learned at the seminars and had a good time.”

Derry Breeden started Breeden Family Farms in Lebanon, Oregon, last year and was exhibiting at just his second Farwest Show. He found the event valuable as an exhibitor, and as an attendee as well.

“I think that really what’s been most important to us is being able to get name recognition, to meet the players who have been just the powerhouses in the industry on a personal level,” he said. “And when we’re all here together as nursery owners, we’re really able to connect and network on a level that isn’t possible outside of this event.”

As an exhibitor, Breeden said he found new customers. As an attendee, he was able to find supplies and plant material he might not have located otherwise.

“Everybody that has something that we’re looking for is right here in one single space,” he said. “And on top of that, we get to go and share beers together [afterwards]. So it’s very good.”

Lucas Piccolo is the owner of Mossify, a new company from Toronto, Canada, that makes plant-based, bendable plant supports for house plants and other plants. He said the face-to-face interaction at Farwest was a difference maker for his company.

“The main reason we go to these shows is to get the word out about our brand,” Piccolo said. “We’re very new on the West Coast. I’ve emailed these people, [but] they’ve never seen my face. They’ve never met me in person. Then when they meet me, and we connect, then we grab a drink after at the [Farwest] Pub Crawl, that’s where the relationships are made.”

Robb Sloan, owner of Noname Nursery in Forest Grove, Oregon, said he made more connections at this year’s show than any of the previous. Because he was chairing the show this year, he hired someone to mind his booth while he walked the floor to talk to exhibitors.

“I was able to actually sell some pretty large contract rows, by going out and visiting other people on the floor and finding out what gaps they had in their production,” Sloan said.

Meanwhile, his booth person was able to track who visited, answer their questions, and observe patterns in who was visiting. That will be good for business as well. “It was a very, very lovely show and we were having a lot of fun,” Sloan said.

Interest in Oregon’s powerhouse nursery industry remains high. Oregon nursery and greenhouse growers sold an incredible $1.19 billion in nursery material in the most recent year tabulated. The show floor had nearly 300 exhibiting companies, including nursery and greenhouse wholesale growers, equipment suppliers, allied service providers and suppliers for growers, retailers and landscape industries and more. Some 34 of the exhibitors were at Farwest for the first time.

Next year’s 2023 Farwest Show will be the 50th annual show. It’s been half a century since the first Farwest took place in the basement of Memorial Coliseum in Portland. What was then a modest dream has become the biggest nursery show on the West Coast. The growth of the show has paralleled the growth of Oregon’s nursery industry over the past 50 years.

“It’s the 50th anniversary next year,” said Piccolo, who plans to be back for it. “I think that’s gonna be huge. I’ve worked in construction, fine dining. I’ve worked in retail. The garden industry is the best one I’ve ever worked in. It’s just such a down-to-earth industry and that’s what we have to keep it as.”


Tags: