|
The flowers which grew
in the open country of Nice were known and appreciated by the travellers
as soon as the 18th century.
Smolett reported
that at that time carnations were sent by post to Turin, Paris and even
London.
Flowers were stored in
wooden boxes. At their arrival, they were re-cut
and plunged into water with vinegar, this process being considered as
restoring their freshness. In the 19th century
the exotic plants were imported , hibiscus, lantanas, camellias,
bougainvilleas, mimosa, for the pleasure of
the winter holiday-makers.
In the middle of the
19th century,
Alphonse Karr settled in Nice, cultivated several gardens in the
town and sold his production in a shop and moreover organized the
expedition, mainly of roses and violets, by answering the orders which
were sent to him by letters or by telegrams.
Decisive stages were crossed in 1864 with the arrival of the railway
which shortened the delays of expedition and in 1883 with the
construction of the canal of the Vésubie which brought water on the
hills of Nice. At that time, the dry gravel which composed the hills
mainly served as a pasture for sheep. Henceforth, the water was retained
in big circular tanks, then poured by gravity on beds fitted out in the
side of the hills, in Saint Antoine, Crémat, La Lanterne, Terron, Saint
Pierre de Féric , Saint-Pancrace...
The culture of flowers
will cover up to 1 000 hectares, what will place Nice in the first world
rank of the cities for flower production. From then on and for about 80
years, it was the prosperity for the west side of this natural
amphitheatre that dominates the city. The growers produced carnations
multiplied in big quantities by propagation of cuttings picked from
October till May when the blooms were prevented by the climatic rigours.
Some developers as Laurent Revelat ( 1875-1962 ) improved the
carnations and created new varieties.
The horticulturists of Nice also
produced roses, violets, anthemia, marigolds, wallflowers,
narcissuses... Thanks to the climate and to the irrigation, few
adjustments were necessary: culture was made in full ground;
exceptionally rollers of reed screenings could be displayed on pickets
to protect the plants from humidity.
At the beginning of the
20th century, about 2000 exploitations were
displayed on the hills of Nice. These domains were generally of small
size. A family succeeded in living on less than 2000 square meters. The
profits were considerable because of the intensiveness of the production
and because of the importance of the demand. But the system seemed
fragile because it was speculative, it depended on the international
situation and on the distant centres of consumption. As for the growers,
they hesitate to adopt new techniques of production and marketing which
developed elsewhere after the Second World war
In 1897, the first flower market in the world was created on the
Cours Saleya.
There, from 4 o'clock in the
morning, producers, wholesalers, different intermediaries and retailers
met ... In the shops of expedition, flowers were carefully arranged in
wicker baskets and sent in all Europe. Czar Nicolas II who, during
winter 1904, wanted to reconstitute a battle of flowers in
Saint-Petersburg, ordered two cars of plants which took only one and a
half day to cross Europe.
In 1965, the wholesale
flower market settled down in Saint Augustin, the Cours
Saleya remained a pole of retail sale. The proximity of the airport
facilitates the expedition by air mail. The speed of routing shows
itself indeed necessary: the Riviera flower market is harshly competed
by the Valley of the Loire and especially the Northern European
countries which supply in considerable quantity
greenhouse-cultivated flowers. |