Tropical Flowers Express, located in upcountry Kauai, functions as a cultivator and distributor of a variety of tropical flowers and foliage, with owners John and Theresa Gordines steering its operations for “a little over 25 years.” Rooted in the notably damp terrain of an island known for its significant precipitation and robust vegetation, the farm maintains a posture of providing floral products that traverse local florists and national borders alike.
The Gordines, through their quarter-century in the industry, have crafted a path wherein their offerings — such as “vibrant Heliconias” and “red ginger” — are not just indigenous or habitual inclusions in local florists’ ensembles, but are also components of gift boxes shipped “all over the continent in the United States.” The couple affirms their farm’s operational scope, specifying, “We sell to our local florists. We ship tropical flower gift boxes all over the continent in the United States, and we do two farmers markets.”
Visitors to their farm would encounter fields dedicated to specific florals, such as a significant expanse “down here below” that is committed to the cultivation of red ginger, which is underscored by John as “one of our most popular flowers” due to its year-round blooming quality. Additionally, their portfolio includes a flower dual-named as “a French kiss” and “a red Indian head,” distinguished not merely by its visual appeal but by the edibility of “the true flower of this plant.”
Diverging from common tropical flora, the farm also hosts Protea plants, the cultivation of which is described as “very unique to Kauai” given the scarcity of growers on the island. This deviation signals an intent to present a diversity in their floral offerings, addressing a wider swath of preferences and applications, particularly in an industry that John and Theresa hint is woven tightly into the socio-economic and cultural fabric of the locale, with the assertion that “the floral industry brings in the second most amount of revenue in the state of Hawaii.”
The farm appears to embrace the philosophies and practices of both heritage and commerce, employing traditional symbology with offerings like tea leaves, recognized as “a symbol of good luck and offering here in Hawaii,” while also ensuring that their products, even when shipped across the continental United States, reach their destination “in two business days, even to the east coast of the United States.” This balancing act persists as a thread through their narrative, encapsulating both an adherence to cultural norms and an acknowledgment of the requisites of modern business operations.
Intriguingly, while Tropical Flowers Express delivers across the U.S., the experience it curates is deeply rooted in its physical locale. This duality of both serving and representing the particularities of its geographically isolated and ecologically distinct origin presents a narrative that’s not merely about flora but the transferal of a specific, place-bound essence to varied locales nationwide.
Theresa and John Gordines, through their hands-on involvement in the cultivation, curating, and distribution processes, underscore a narrative where the vibrant and disparate blooms of their farm serve as conduits — both tangible and symbolic — of Kauai’s lush, tropical environment to doors across the continent. Their story unobtrusively weaves through the threads of commerce, tradition, and ecology, providing a glimpse into an enterprise that’s as much about perpetuating and sharing the tangible attributes of their locale as it is about navigating the pathways of a modern floral business.