Dan Schantz Tour Information
Dan Schantz Farms in Zionsville, Pa offers free tours as a community service. Tours connect us closer to our customers, our school age "future horticulturalists" and others in the industry. Each tour is custom made for your specific group. Tours usually start at 10 am or earlier Wednesdays thru Friday.
Touring our facility is a good way to see the plants we grow for our retail store on Lehigh Street in Allentown.
What to expect on your tour:
See first hand the inner workings of a 50 acre wholesale greenhouse farm, plants growing from start to finish. Meet our growers, see automation and computerized machinery watering plants, maintaining temperature vs. the older section of manual greenhouse. See seeds being sown and germinated, transplanting machines, our soil making room, our coworkers working in the greenhouse. Mostly, see millions of beautiful plants.
Guests are required to arrive 15 minutes prior to the tour.
Those who arrive after the scheduled time will not be permitted to attend.
We apologize, but there is no way for you to find us or catch up. No
unsupervised person may be admitted to our compound.
There are restroom breaks half way thought the tour. Anyone with
special needs please ask the guide so we may accommodate you.
Wear comfortable shoes. and shoes you won't mind getting a little
wet.
Wear layered clothing.
If it's a sunny day, even if it's cold outside, expect certain areas to be
HOT or warm.
It normally takes 2 hours from start to finish, and although leisurely, will require a bit of walking.
Take lots of pictures.
Ask lots of questions.
If you are scheduling a child/school tour, Click on this link
We hope you enjoy your visit!
Thank you for your interest in our facility, we look forward to planning your special trip.
Cindy Thomas
Email: cthomas@danschantz.com
Please contact me for my personal office phone number.
Our address is 8025 Spinnerstown Road, Zionsville, Pa 18092
Directions here:
From Allentown:
I-78 East towards Quakertown
Take 309 Quakertown exit, stay in right lane to Saucon Valley Road.
Take LEFT onto Limeport Pike (end of Saucon Valley Road)
Drive about 8 miles, go Left onto Spinnerstown Road
Go up hill, turn Left into Dan Schantz Greenhouse Complex.
*Please have ONE adult go into the office to announce.
All children or others stay with vehicles outside. (we will be driving immediately up the hill to the greenhouses, then walking the rest of the way)
From Bethlehem:
I-78 West towards Quakertown. See directions above*.
From Philly or South:
Take PA Turnpike- NORTH NE extention to Quakertown Exit
Turn West (right) onto John Fries Hwy (663)
Turn right onto Spinnerstown Road
follow Spinnerstown for 3.5 miles aprox. (follow yellow lines on road)
turn right into Dan Schantz Greenhouse complex. See directions above*.
From Quakertown:
663 to right onto Spinnerstown Road (just after PA TPK NE EXT. )
follow yellow lines for 3.5 miles
turn right into Dan Schantz Greenhouse complex.
Please see directions above*
Friday, April 17, 2015
Dan Schantz Tour Information 2013
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Thursday, November 6, 2014
Poinsettias!
Poinsettias
make great holiday plants, but many people love to watch them grow all year
long.
Poinsettias are part of the
Euphorbiaceae or Spurge family. Botanically, the plant is known as Euphorbia pulcherrima.
Poinsettias are
not poisonous. A study at Ohio State University showed that a 50-pound child would have to eat more
than 500 leaves to have any harmful effect. Plus poinsettia leaves have
an awful taste. You might want to keep your pets from snacking on poinsettia
leaves. Pets tending to eat the plant can end up with a few stomach issues,
which won’t be fun to clean up.
In the United
States and perhaps elsewhere, there is a common misconception that the
poinsettia is highly toxic.
This misconception was spread by a 1919 urban
legend of a two-year-old child dying after consuming a poinsettia leaf.[18]
In Mexico the poinsettia is a perennial shrub that will
grow 10-15 feet tall.
In your home, it will reach a nice height of about 4’,
providing the stems don’t snap off first.
Since they favor being outdoors during the summer, simply transferring
it from inside to outside during the summer, could cause it harm. They should be pruned to keep them well
branching. If you don’t want the white
sap to drip, place a small piece of tissue on the newly pruned stem. Remove it when it’s dry (you may need to wet
the tissue to remove it from the sap).
Poinsettias are fast growers, so it’s imperative to feed
it often.
Timing out the
Blooms:
NO, you don’t have to put it “in a closet for 6 months”
….
Once the days start becoming shorter, they will naturally
have 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of dark.
It’s
important not to give them any artificial light during the night hours. Even street lamps can throw them off
schedule.
Keep
poinsettias moist. Don’t let them sit in
stagnant water. Remove any fallen leaves
from the soil to prevent fungus. Provide
a bright window, lots of space around it and keep an eye on it for watering and
you will have a wonderful plant companion for many years. *
In Spain the Poinsettia has a different
holiday attribution. It is known there as "Flor de Pascua", meaning
"Easter flower".
Poinsettias
received their name in the United States in honor of Joel Roberts Poinsett, who
introduced the plant into the country in 1828. Poinsett was a botanist,
physician and the first United States Ambassador to Mexico. He sent cuttings of
the plant he had discovered in Southern Mexico to his home in Charleston, South
Carolina. The word Poinsettia is traditionally capitalized because it is named
after a person.
* Of course, THIS author thinks you
should just toss them away after Christmas.
And just get a new one next November.
Christmas Cactus
Christmas Cactus (Schlumbergera x buckleyi)
These little gems thrive
on neglect. They don’t need you to worry
about when they will bloom, they do it automatically. Keep it in a bright sunny window and let it
dry completely before watering. Feed it
once a month to keep it happy and healthy.
They can be propagated easy enough by sticking a leaf sect in the
soil. Prune them if they start getting
too long and leggy to promote
branching and more blossoms. They come
in a vast array of colors, and are available in the late fall at our store.
Cyclamen Flower Facts
Cyclamen can be grown both outdoors and indoors in pots. Cyclamen
are a genus of plants containing 20 species. They are native in the
Mediterranean and Africa. Cyclamen grow mainly in dry forest or scrub areas.
They are part of the primrose family, although they are tuberous and bear no
obvious resemblance to primroses. Cyclamen come in many colors.
Care: Cyclamen are very easy to care for. Place them in a cool but semi-sunny window,
and allow the soil to become dry between watering. Avoid keeping the roots soggy- thus rotting
the tuber.
In the summer, Cyclamen will normally go
dormant. In late May, the leaves will
start to droop and turn yellow. Store
your cyclamen in a “resting place” – cool, out of the sun while it refreshes it’s bulb. When the days start to get short and the sun
starts to fade, small leaves will appear.
Move it to a bright location, and give it some plant food to encourage
new blooms.
They come in many colors and can be found at Dan Schantz Greenhouse and Cut Flower Outlet during the cool months.
Painted Poinsettias???
Yep. First they are white. Then we have a special dye, mixed with
alcohol.
It took us a few years
to get the right colors and dye to alcohol ratio, but now, poinsettias are
available in any color scheme! Need a
bunch of a specific color? It doesn’t
hurt to ask us. We may be able to spray
some for you at our farm (Dan Schantz Farm and Greenhouse in Zionsville)
Aren’t these fun? Try mixing Party Sprinkle poinsettias with
solid painted poinsettias. Creating attractive, no leak planters indoors
It's great to have indoor plants, but sometimes watering can become a chore. To give the plant enough water to drench the soil many times results in excess water leaking all over the carpet. This illustration shows planting a large floor plant- simply reduce the sizes for a smaller desk plant.
Try this method that interior plantscapers use:

Choose a LARGE pot with no drain holes.
Add about 6" of Styrofoam Peanuts / chips (the kind for packing boxes) but NOT the ones that look like white cheese doodles! They melt.
Put your plant- with it's pot still on, in the center of the new larger pot. You can keep adding Styrofoam peanuts and fill the rest of the pot up, or use strips of light foam. As long as it bends, you can put it in between the potted plant and the new larger pot.
Cover the top of the plant/pot/foam with
1: Spanish moss
2: mulch
3: sheet moss
The end result will be a larger looking potted plant, an elegant and professional presentation and a cleaner neater way to water your plants without mess. The water will be able to drain freely, and using foam will help keep it bacteria free and let some air get in. Check it once in a while by going under the mulch and past the foam- to see if the water is staying stagnant under there.
You'll also be able to move the plant easier, and replace it with little effort if you need to.
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