Valentine’s blossoms worth $475M sold in Turkey yearly
ISTANBUL
Some 2.5 billion Turkish liras (roughly $475 million) is spent on flowers every Valentine’s Day in Turkey, a Turkish florist union chief said on Feb. 11.
“[The amount of] flowers produced in a month are sold on [a single day on] Feb. 14”, İsmail Başaran told state-run Anadolu Agency.
“One out of four gifts is a flower,” Başaran said, underlining that flowers were often the first gifts to come to mind.
While roses are usually the most preferred, he noted that people also buy their loved ones orchids, lilies and daisies on Feb. 14.
He added that flower prices in 2019 went up 20 percent compared to the previous year as one rose is currently sold for 10 Turkish liras ($1.9) and a bouquet going for between 20 Turkish liras ($3.8) up to 100 (nearly $19).
While florists do not often get receive such orders Başaran said that some seeking “something different” bought sets of 1001 roses, a bouquet of which cost 10,000 Turkish liras ($1,896).
Valentine’s Day is celebrated with cards, flowers, and chocolates but has its roots in a 3rd-century priest in Rome who performed secret marriages between young people.
Martyred by the Roman emperor Claudius II in 270 A.D., St. Valentine is honored by Christian churches every year.
However, across the world also in Turkey, young people have developed a fashion for surprise proposals on this day.