Rescue florists give new life to leftover flowers; nonprofit just needs 6-inch stems and someone to surprise

May 11, 2023  |  Nikki Overfelt Chifalu

AJ Miller, Unexpected Blooms, creates a floral arrangement

Impact is growing again for an initiative that sends recycled floral arrangements — flowers otherwise headed for the trash after events — to homebound Kansas City seniors.

A volunteer at Unexpected Blooms helps to create floral arrangements

Volunteer-run Unexpected Blooms recently celebrated its sixth birthday, after being forced to take a pause when the pandemic stalled many large gatherings from which they sourced flowers, shared board members Nancy Williams and AJ Miller.

Now back in action, the nonprofit operation delivered more than 2,100 bouquets after rescuing flowers from 34 events in the past year.

“Just seeing them there and knowing that they’re going to live on is really neat,” Williams said of picking up flowers after most people expect their usefulness has run its course. “Because they’re gorgeous and they’re fresh and they’re not ready for the dumpster. That is meaningful.”

Unexpected Blooms’ website features a form where community members can sign up to donate leftover flowers (with at least 6-inch long stems) from their events. Once the flowers are dropped off or picked up — from such gatherings as weddings, galas, celebrations of life, and country club brunches — volunteers deconstruct, cut, and arrange the flowers into new bouquets in vases that are then delivered to about 30 local healthcare facilities.

“They’re not able to get out in the community and so we’re bringing that life into there,” Miller noted, referencing the residents who receive them.

Click here to donate flowers from your event.

Williams, who is the board chair for Unexpected Blooms and has been volunteering with the organization for almost six years, said people enjoy the unexpected connection of receiving flowers, noting studies by Kansas State and Rutgers universities that show the positive impact flowers have on mental and physical health.

“Just the exchange for a moment is very uplifting,” she explained. “One guy asked me once, ‘Now how much is this going to cost me? I can’t afford any flowers.’ And I said, ‘Sir, these are just for you. They’re a gift.’”

Unexpected Blooms

The flowers also allow people to relish in their natural beauty, she continued.

“The fact that the colors, the scent, the touch — all of those — impact how a person thinks about their world,” she added.

Unexpected Blooms delivers to healthcare facilities that are located near its two headquarters — Ward Parkway Presbyterian Church and Village Church on Antioch.

Kate Ryan, the assistant executive director at Silvercrest at Deer Creek Senior Living in Overland Park, shared that their partnership with the nonprofit has been a joy. She said it isn’t everyday that the whole facility is in bloom, making those moments after a delivery truly special.

“Our first donation from Unexpected Blooms was so surprisingly beautiful,” she explained. “You could have easily charged a lot of money for such beautiful arrangements, and we — all of a sudden — had a cart of 20 arrangements for free. We drove our cart from apartment to apartment spreading joy to our surprised residents, some who haven’t had fresh flowers since moving in. It was as much fun for our staff to deliver the bouquets as it was for our residents to receive them.”

Some of the memory care facilities, Miller noted, have also mentioned that flowers — like music — can often trigger memories. Williams agreed.

“When I walk into a community of faith on Easter, I am transported back immediately to unloading Easter lilies from the truck into my aunt’s florist shop,” she said.

Unexpected Blooms

More than 4,000 vases collected in a year

Unexpected Blooms was founded in 2017 by Prairie Village couple Cameron and Carolyn Elliott, who were retired from the funeral home and floral businesses, respectively, explained Miller.

“They decided that they had seen so much waste in their industry that they would just simply start up an organization that would do something with the florals,” she said.

Miller first started volunteering with the nonprofit about five years ago when she and her daughter wanted to find an environmentally-conscious organization in which to become involved. On top of just repurposing flowers, she said, she loves that they recycle vases and use leftover rose stems instead of plastic cardettes.

“If we’re not able to use the vases, we will recycle them into the floral industry or donate them to another cause that can reuse the types that they were donated,” she added, as they collected more than 4,000 vases just last year.

Unexpected Blooms has about 80 or so active volunteers, Miller said, who do everything from pickup and delivery to flower arranging to washing vases to administrative tasks. 

“It’s been surprising to me how much joy you get from it,” she shared.

Unexpected Blooms

Building funding, confidence

Unexpected Blooms is in a reblooming phase right now, noted Williams, who retired from a career in the nonprofit sector. Before the pandemic, she was helping the organization build up to a place where employees could be hired and grants would help sustain it. But then it had to shut down for over a year — as events stopped and healthcare facilities restricted access — and Unexpected Blooms lost its location for deconstruction and redistribution. 

“AJ and I said, ‘We really believe in this mission and we want to continue this,’” she added. “‘Let’s see what we can do.’”

They were able to find two churches to work out of, raised more than $20,000 last year, and received their first grant from the Junior League of Kansas City. They have also added floral design classes for fundraising and volunteer training, as they are always looking for new volunteers.

Click here to sign up for classes or here to volunteer.

“The classes have been a way to earn income and also introduce people who want to perhaps be a volunteer or maybe just want to learn,” Williams explained. “My belief is people need the confidence to arrange flowers. They can arrange. It’s not a complicated kind of thing. I think confidence building is a really great part of the classes.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2023 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Jason Roberts, Strang Hall, Edison Factory

        Cooking cash-free: Strang Hall leans into tech framework with its OP restaurant incubator 

        By Tommy Felts | March 12, 2020

        A cashless dining experience at Strang Hall is about more than efficiency, said Jason Roberts. It’s part of the Overland Park chef collective’s engrained tech framework. “It allows us to shut down the place super fast at the end of the day,” explained Roberts, Strang Hall CIO and principal at Edison Factory, the startup builder…

        Jody Brazil, Rich Mogull, and Mike Rothman, DisruptOps

        DisruptOps raises $9M Series A with serial entrepreneur, cyber security veterans taming the cloud

        By Tommy Felts | March 10, 2020

        With security threats to cloud-enabled businesses outpacing the ability of most companies to respond, a fresh funding infusion is expected to help DisruptOps strengthen its team and its ability to react, said Jody Brazil. The Kansas City startup — a SaaS-based cloud security management platform that helps enterprises address the critical challenges of cloud security at…

        Fishtech, BacklotCars, Bardavon named to Forbes’ 2020 best startup employers list

        By Tommy Felts | March 10, 2020

        A trio of fast-growing Kansas City companies are among the 500 best startup employers in the nation, according to a new ranking from Forbes. Fishtech Group — one of Startland News’ Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2020 — lead the local honorees at No. 277 on Forbes’ list. BacklotCars was ranked at No. 339,…

        Image courtesy of Knoq

        Scaling tech startup with door-to-door ‘Knoqers’ plans no-contact option amid Coronavirus

        By Tommy Felts | March 10, 2020

        A tech startup with offices in Kansas City and Boston plans to hire 200-plus “Knoqers” in 2020, but the company admits its growing army of door-to-door neighborhood representatives face an unexpected challenge this spring and summer: the spread of the Coronavirus. “Like everyone across the world, we have been closely following news about the Coronavirus…