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The Flowery: Former Police and Military Family Now Growing Medical Marijuana

Inside one of the grow rooms for the flowery, these seedlings are ini the early stages of the plants life cycle. After a few weeks they'll be moved to a different harvest room where the marijuana buds will begin to form.
Chris Remington
Inside one of the grow rooms for the flowery, these seedlings are ini the early stages of the plants life cycle. After a few weeks they'll be moved to a different harvest room where the marijuana buds will begin to form.

On a visit to the Flowery, a medical marijuana grow operation in Homestead, Florida, it's stunning to see how inconspicuous the set-up is. Tucked away in the sprawling farmlands of South Dade, it's easy to miss the building 鈥 driving past rows of ornamental flowers and plants.

Ori Sivan and Donovan Garrison greet visitors at the security gate, they run the business and operations for the Flowery respectively. Also part of the family business is Donovan鈥檚 father, Stephen, who happened to be sitting in a back office outside the grow operation.

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He鈥檚 well over 6 feet tall, with a stocky build and long white beard, his grandchildren have called him Santa Claus. Stephen is a gregarious man, filled with colorful stories about his many years running Bill鈥檚 Nursery in Homestead.

Florida law requires medical marijuana growers to have 30 plus years in the nursery business, so the Flowery operates as part of Bill鈥檚 Nursery. But prior to his current operation, Stephen served as a police chief in Virginia Gardens. He also lost his son Matthew, an Iraq War veteran, which led his family to start selling medical marijuana.

Stephen Garrison standing with me outside the grow operation for the Flowery in Homestead Florida.
Stephen Garrison standing with me outside the grow operation for the Flowery in Homestead Florida.

Florida鈥檚 medical marijuana market has more than doubled in the past two years. There are nearly 600,000 registered patients and it鈥檚 valued to be a more than $1.2 billion business. The Flowery is one of 22 licensed medical marijuana treatment centers, the term used by the state for growers and distributors. But the lucrative business is highly competitive, with larger companies like Surterra and Trulieve outselling the Flowery by millions of dollars.

Stephen Garrison understands the contradiction, that he used to arrest people for marijuana and now his family grows the crop themselves.

鈥淚鈥檝e made plenty of marijuana arrests in my 20 years in law enforcement. It was the law and I enforced it,鈥 he explained. 鈥淏ut I think that anybody that鈥檚 in jail for that should be turned loose today. They should expunge people鈥檚 records, it鈥檚 ludicrous.鈥

The inspiration for the Flowery all started with Stephen Garrison鈥檚 son Matthew. He was a disabled veteran who served multiple tours of duty in Iraq. He believed in the medical advantages provided by marijuana compared to all of the other drugs Veterans Affairs doctors had prescribed to him, according to his father.

Matt was charged with an incredibly dangerous and important mission during his tours of duty, finding improvised explosive devices and detonating them. His experience as an exchange student in France as a teenager helped him prepare for this responsibility.

鈥淗e spent an entire summer raiding using metal detectors. And the first thing you learn when raiding French antiquities is you look for structure,鈥 said Stephen Garrison. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to look for IEDs, you should stay mounted. If you send soldiers out there with these metal detectors, snipers are going to pick them off one at a time.鈥

Matt was recognized by the Military Times for uncovering the largest weapon cache in the Iraq war.

But he returned from the war with scars, both emotional and physical. His sister Steph Frohock now handles marketing for the Flowery. She explained adjusting to life back at home for Matt was incredibly challenging.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e giving him prescription drugs for sleeping because he had nightmares. Rightfully so because he sees his best friend get killed right next to him. I think that was another thing of not having that, somebody else that could relate to you because none of us could relate to him,鈥 she said via Zoom.

Matt was prescribed painkillers by the VA and Ambien for his sleep issues. His family noticed the adverse reaction the drugs were having on him and recommended he try getting a medical marijuana card. But Matt was afraid he鈥檇 lose his concealed carry permit if he was registered as a medical marijuana patient, even though marijuana patients can have those permits.

Matt died in January 2017 from an overdose of his sleep medication, it was ruled heart failure. The family applied to become medical marijuana growers later that year but the first application was denied. They and in 2019, their license was finally granted.

The Flowery鈥檚 grow operation is all indoors. The rooms are divided by the different stages of the plant鈥檚 life cycle, from seedling to full bloom. There are different light systems and water filtration depending on the kind of marijuana being grown. Sivan worked for many years in the marijuana industry in Washington before joining the team at the Flowery.

鈥淲hat stops us from doing outdoors in Florida is the humidity,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he outdoor Florida summer that density pretty much translates directly into mold. It鈥檚 one of the main things we are dressed up to stop is mold spores from growing.鈥

Inside the harvest room for medical marijuana at the Flowery. These plants need to dry out before they can be trimmed and tested for distribution.
Inside the harvest room for medical marijuana at the Flowery. These plants need to dry out before they can be trimmed and tested for distribution.

Florida law requires medical marijuana companies to handle all aspects of the operation, so the Flowery cannot outsource deliveries. Donovan Garrison handles the company鈥檚 operations. He explained the state鈥檚 vertical integration system puts a big strain on them financially.

鈥淪ometimes, and it kills me every time, I go to Jacksonville for one order. Now hopefully I have a bunch of stuff in the middle that I can make sense of it. But there鈥檚 a lot of days I lose 500 dollars a day in labor, in fuel and insurance just to get to my customer,鈥 Donovan Garrison said.

The Flowery is looking to expand its operations. They recently built a new warehouse space, up the street from where they鈥檙e growing marijuana now. At a company meeting there in May, they talked about working towards producing more than 10 times their current output.

They鈥檙e also exploring other forms of cannabis products: distillates, tinctures and edibles. Sivan and Donovan Garrison say it鈥檒l be a while before they get to that point.

Donovan Garrison (center front) speaking to employees of the Flowery at a company meeting in May. Steph Frohawk, Matt Garrison's sister, is standing to the left.
Donovan Garrison (center front) speaking to employees of the Flowery at a company meeting in May. Steph Frohawk, Matt Garrison's sister, is standing to the left.

鈥淲e haven鈥檛 even begun, we couldn鈥檛 open a store if we wanted to because we wouldn鈥檛 have enough production for a store,鈥 said Sivan. 鈥淭he biggest complaint, you know, is I have a lot of friends that are medical patients and everybody is out of everything all the time. You know I have friends that will drive 40, 60, 80, 150 miles to go get flower from somewhere up north because everyone is sold out here."

After our tour of the new space, we explored the home the Garrisons have owned for decades, which sits on the same land of the nursery.

Inside, Stephen Garrison showed me the various military honors and photos he continues to adorn for his son Matthew. He gets tearful as he reflects on memories of his son.

鈥淗e was considered certainly by me and by his fellow soldiers, as a hero,鈥 Stephen Garrison said.

Stephen Garrison standing in front of his son Matt's military form during my visit to his home in May.
Chris Remington
Stephen Garrison standing in front of his son Matt's military form during my visit to his home in May.

Stephen is helping raise Matt鈥檚 two children. After an interview in May, he was heading off to his granddaughter鈥檚 elementary school graduation.

He says he supports his grandkids if they choose a career in the military or if they want to stay working on the farm.

Chris knew he wanted to work in public radio beginning in middle school, as WHYY played in his car rides to and from school in New Jersey. He鈥檚 freelanced for All Things Considered and was a desk associate for CBS Radio News in New York City. Most recently, he was producing for Capital Public Radio鈥檚 Insight booking guests, conducting research and leading special projects at Sacramento鈥檚 NPR affiliate.
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