Sugar Oak Lane isn't a brand. It's a family, a piece of Georgia land, and 100+ years of growing things with care.
Sugar Oak Lane sits on land that's been farmed by our family for over a century. Five generations of Georgians who understood something simple: good things come from tended land. For most of that time, this was a working row crop farm — cotton, corn, tobacco. The flowers came later, when one of us fell in love with the idea of growing beautiful things rather than commodity crops.
We transitioned to specialty cut flower farming gradually. First a few rows of dahlias. Then sunflowers. Then a greenhouse for year-round production. Today the farm produces dozens of varieties of cut flowers, maintains a nursery operation, and supports a small on-farm business — workshops, dried goods, wholesale accounts, and this shop.
"We grow with intention, sell farm-direct, and believe the best mornings start with fresh flowers."
Today the farm encompasses several acres of cut flower production, a licensed nursery, and a working greenhouse. We plant our first seeds in January, make our first cuts in March, and don't stop until the dahlias give up in November. Every month brings something different. Every season tells a different story on the same piece of land.
Our products reach customers through our farm shop, local farmers markets, a wholesale program for florists and event planners, and an on-farm workshop program that brings people out to the land. We like that last part best. There's something that happens when a person walks into a dahlia row in full bloom — it changes how they see flowers.
We're based in Loganville, Georgia — just east of Atlanta, in a community where farming heritage still matters. We're proud to be part of that. We're proud to still be here, five generations in, still pulling weeds at sunrise and deadheading at dusk.
Farm tours available by appointment. Workshops run seasonally throughout the year. Or just come to one of our farmers market appearances — we'd love to meet you, put a face to the name, and maybe send you home with something that just came out of the ground this morning.