When Valentine's Day arrives, a Plymouth flower-growing business will be at the peak of its popularity.
But Len Busch Roses isn't popular right now with some of its neighbors, who are raising a stink over the stench coming from wood chips burned to warm greenhouses.
"The last two weeks have been the worse so far," said Corby Pelto, a longtime resident. "We just want to put an end to it."
Like most cities, Plymouth doesn't regulate odor, so the company — the only rose grower in the nation outside of California — isn't violating any city or state ordinances or pollution rules. And Patrick Busch, the second-generation owner, said wood-burning boilers have heated the 15 acres of greenhouses for the company's 50 years without any complaints.
"We want to be good neighbors," Busch said, adding that he lives on the property and hasn't noticed any odor issues.
"It's just confusing to us how this emerged. Our process is essentially the same as it has been in the beginning. It's challenging and unfortunate that this is coming up at this time."
The Plymouth company has a half-million square feet of greenhouses that produce 7 million stems a year, from lilies to snapdragons and roses, all blossoming in the middle of a subzero Minnesota winter.
The greenhouses are heated by the boilers, which are fed tree trimmings stored in a towering pile in a shelter outside. When the wood chips decompose, they emit the vinegar-like odor.