Mimosa flower why give on March 8. SFW - jokes, humor, girls, accidents, cars, celebrity photos and much more. The start of the mimosa festival

Anyone who does not like mimosa is disingenuous. No, of course, I'm not talking about dried, rusty, stubby balls, curled leaves, for fifty rubles a twig, in an absurd half-mirror bag, with the same stubby bow. I'm talking about Mimosa. Luxurious, delicate, fragrant, sunny, fluffy, green, spring. Let it be traditional, let it be replicated, let it become an invariable symbol of March 8 and get on all the posters, postcards and boxes with sweets released for Women's Day.

Why, in fact, mimosa, and not gladiolus or snowdrop? There are several answers, and all of them have the right to be true.

Mimosa is gentle and at the same time is not afraid of March frosts. In a word, as fragile and persistent as any female representative on this planet. And if you consider that the history of the women's holiday is not at all feminine, it becomes clear why it has become a symbol. Remember, it all started with the fact that on March 8, 1908, 15,000 fragile but courageous women took to the streets, demanding a reduction in the working day and equal pay conditions with men, as well as the right to vote. 146 brave women died.

Two years later, the famous communist Clara Zetkin at the Second International Socialist Conference proposed the establishment of an International Women's Day. Of course, Clara Zetkin did not think of this day as a banal women's holiday, when men would languidly wander around floristic salons and buy all kinds of bouquets. This day was intended for rallies and processions of the weaker sex, with the help of which they could open the eyes of society to their problems.

Over time, rallies and marches have diminished. In the world, the euphoria from the holiday came to naught, but our country liked Women's Day, and since 1966 it has become an official holiday. And along with it, a headache was added to men who were perplexed - what to give. They came to the aid of a wonderful tradition - to give flowers. And if you still doubt that flowers will be the best gift for the spring holiday, at least listen to sociologists. After all, every fifth representative of the weaker sex admitted to scientists that flowers are the best gift ("Romir"). And here lies another answer to the question of why it was the mimosa that ended up in the symbols. It is the fragrant Mimosa, and not pretentious roses and aristocratic chrysanthemums, that begin to bloom first after a long winter.

By the way, mimosa, like any woman, has a secret. The one we boldly call mimosa is not a mimosa at all. The omniscient Wikipedia tells us that this is an acacia of the Mimozov subfamily, - silver acacia (Acacia dealbata). It grows very picturesquely on the Black Sea coast of the Caucasus and it is from there that it gets to all flower shops in our country on the eve of International Women's Day.

Finally, the third version of the correct answer. From the flower language of florists, mimosa is translated as constancy and shyness. It was these qualities that every decent girl and woman once had to have. Perhaps today, presenting a branch of a fragile mimosa, men subconsciously convince themselves that their chosen ones are just like that. Interestingly, Women's Day is celebrated and considered a day off not only in Russia. It is celebrated in Angola, Zambia, Cambodia, Kenya, North Korea, Madagascar, Uganda. In Laos, this day is considered a day off only for women, and in China, the weak half of humanity works on a shortened schedule on this day (Wikipedia data). Whether the noble Angolans or Laotians give mimosa branches to their beautiful Angolans or Laotians on this day, I don’t know, but for some reason I have no doubt that each of them, like every fifth Russian woman, dreams on March 8 in recognition of receiving a fragile, spring, fragrant flower.

The Persian poet Hafiz wrote that there is the only flower in the world that overshadows the rose with its innocence and beauty - the tulip. Long before the start of the celebration of International Women's Day in the East, they sang the tenderness and purity of multi-colored buds. So why exactly did they become a symbol of spring and femininity? And why do men attack flower stalls in search of tulips on March 8? We have sorted out this issue. There were several reasons.

Why are tulips and mimosas given in spring?

Daffodils, mimosa and tulips bloom before the rest. But the former, thanks to legends, are associated with selfishness and narcissism. The second one is too simple. But still others have all the advantages of a gift for the spring holiday: large juicy green leaves, fragile buds, bright colors. A complete set to create a sunny positive mood.

There are other primroses: galanthus (snowdrops), crocuses, anemone. But these are already wild flowers. They quickly fade and after a few hours after cutting, they lose their freshness.

Tulips - a universal gift for March 8

International Women's Day is a mass holiday. Everyone should be congratulated: the one-year-old daughter, and a distant relative of the wife, and Lyudmila Ivanovna from the accounting department, and her five subordinates, whom you have never seen, but you know that they are. In such a situation, it is important not to go broke, but also not to deprive women of attention.

Tulips are a great idea. The cost of their cultivation is low. Sprouts sprout quickly and there are practically no defective bulbs. Even if you decide to buy a chocolate bar, it will either be more expensive, or Lyudmila Ivanovna will eat it in two bites. And nothing will be left of your attention. And tulips will remind you of your gallantry for a week.

Bouquet of tulips - for every taste and color!

A good present meets the tastes of the recipient. Little is known about Lyudmila Ivanovna's tastes. Preferences in gifts for a one-year-old daughter have not yet formed. However, there is hardly a woman who will say that she does not like flowers. A variety of varieties and shades allows you to make even a simple bouquet of tulips original.

Mixes are very popular. You can make a composition of pastel shades - pink-white-lilac. In spring, the colors of red, purple, yellow buds look colorful. Unusual parrot and fringed species, which resemble irregularly elongated terry pompoms, are in increasing demand.

According to data provided by the flower company Semitsvetik, more than 5,000 tulip bouquets were sold on March 8 and about 1,000 more were sold on the eve of the holidays. In order to ensure the assembly of such a huge number of bouquets, the company placed an order for flowers from Holland even before the New Year. Especially popular were peony and fringed varieties - their sales amounted to more than 30%.

The reasons to give women tulips are weighty. It is cost-effective, and at the same time, you can always make a non-standard surprise by choosing an interesting variety or color. Let's let the beautiful spring flower, following the poet Hafiz, outshine the beautiful rose for a while, and enjoy its bright colors and the smiles of our beloved women.

For the provided photo materials and informational support, we thank the company Semitsvetik (semicvetic.com).

One of the traditional flowers that is customary to give on International Women's Day is mimosa.

It is sold in large quantities on the eve of the holiday, and many of the fair sex simply do not like the soul in these delicate yellow flowers.

But only a self-made bouquet will not wither, it will be able to please a woman throughout the year. Such a gift will daily remind Her of your love and a wonderful spring holiday.

The mimosa flower is considered the symbol of International Women's Day. By March 8, the plant is brought from Abkhazia.

To make crafts in the form of a bouquet of mimosa, you will need: green and pink colored paper, yellow napkins, glue, pencil, ruler, paints, scissors and a plastic cup.

First of all, you need to make the stem of the plant. To do this, cut a long strip of green paper and twist it into a thin tube. The ends of the tube must be fixed with glue. If you do not want to wait until the glue dries, you can fasten the ends of the craft with a stapler.

Now you can move on to creating flowers. They are small in mimosa, but very fluffy. For their manufacture, you will need yellow napkins, which are cut into strips of 3 centimeters, each of which is folded in half. After that, you need to make many cuts 1 centimeter wide along the entire length of the strip. Next, each segment is folded along the uncut side into a roll. One side should be fluffy. You need to make an odd number of such flowers, and then stick them on a pre-prepared stem base. You can make flowers from corrugated paper.

Mimosa will look unfinished if it does not have leaves. To make the latter from green colored paper, you need to cut out two long ovals, each of which folds in half. Next, we apply such incisions that were made on the flowers. The leaves are straightened and at one of the tips are glued to the bottom of the stem.

So, the gift for the holiday of March 8 is already ready, but the craft will look much more spectacular in a vase, which can also be made independently from improvised items.

We take a plastic glass, glue a flower to the bottom so that it holds tightly, and fill the remaining space of the vessel with crumpled green paper. From a sheet of pink paper we cut off a rectangle, which should be slightly higher in height than the cup. We wrap it around the base of the vase and glue it together. It turns out a sprig of mimosa in a pink vase. The gift can be decorated with sparkles or other decorative elements.

You can attach a small postcard with warm wishes to the craft. Such a touching handmade present will melt the heart of any woman.


Yes, yes, it is this messenger of spring, the full-fledged mistress of International Women's Day, who has such a wonderful ability. This dazzling yellow flower with silvery leaves was brought from Australia more than two centuries ago. Only he is not actually a mimosa: this wonderful creature is called silver acacia.



One has only to slightly touch the mimosa, as a shiver runs through the fluffy bush, and it instantly hides its leaves, as if it had been burned by frost. There is a belief that mimosa behaves the same way when a crafty person appears.. Botanists explain this behavior of the flower by its protective reaction from tropical rains. First, a pair of leaves is formed, on which the first drops fell, then the second pair, and so on until the leaves rise up with their ends up, and the stalk falls down, almost pressed against the prickly stem.



A cute delicate flower is not only touchy, but also a big coward: does not like to stay in the dark! Despite these two circumstances, mimosa remains a very unpretentious creature! It blooms 2-3 years after sowing. For almost two hundred years, mimosa has conquered the expanses of Montenegro, the hills of France, the cities of Italy ... A naive twig with yellow sun-buttons has fallen in love with many. The wonderful messengers of spring delight the eyes of people tired of the gray winter cold and snowstorm so much that it was simply impossible not to fall in love with them!

Therefore, mimosa fills the still cold streets, markets, flower stalls and even underground passages as a full-fledged queen.

In Soviet times, a mimosa branch, being a symbol of March 8, was a traditional addition to a box of chocolates or a bottle of perfume. Years passed, but the love for mimosa did not pass. Every eighth of March, she still populates our homes to the delight of women's hearts.

Save a friend from life's prose,
Buy her a bouquet of ardent mimosa,
Let her see, let her know
That somewhere in the south spring is coming,
Which song pours into the soul,
And soon all of us will be swirling in colors.



And in France there is even a holiday - mimosa festival. In 1904, in the south of the country, in the province of Pierre-Rich, for the first time, mimosa flowers bloomed on the hills. For more than a hundred years, mimosa has become widespread in France; in spring, many hills are covered with its thickets so abundantly that being among them you get drunk from the rich aroma. Every year, with the beginning of the mimosa bloom, which means the end of winter, France celebrates this holiday with a parade of flowers. Numerous processions of carriages decorated with mimosa pass through the streets of the city with music, the program of the holiday includes an exhibition-fair, a presentation of "Mimosa Roads", the choice of Miss Mimosa, parades, a costume ball.


A similar festival has become a tradition in Montenegro. The main content of the holiday is the expectation of spring, the harbingers of which for many were the flowering of a dazzling yellow shrub. But, in addition, this cultural event is of great economic importance: in the "off season" on the Montenegrin coast, a tangible flow of tourists from neighboring countries is provided.

In whatever country you are, spring is always the time of sun, light and love. And a mimosa branch is hundreds of little suns in your house, a ray of light on your face, a drop of love given to you or by you. Delicate and ardent flower with a touch of romance and sophistication. Mimosa is like tiny diamond earrings: small, but how they adorn!


In the language of flowers, mimosa symbolize permanence and constancy.

Both the mimosas themselves and the tradition of giving them at the beginning of spring came to us from Europe. There, these flowers begin to bloom in early February. Mimosas are not afraid of even the most severe cold weather, and for about a day after they are plucked, they remain fresh. In addition, fluffy yellow mimosa balls were considered a symbol of the sun and rebirth in ancient Egypt.

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Today the world celebrates International Women's Day, the symbol of which is mimosa flowers. Let's find out why the flowering branches of Acacia silver (this is the scientific name for the cute yellow flowers that are traditionally given on March 8) serve as the main sign of attention to women on this day.

Today the whole planet celebrates the holiday of spring, International Women's Day on March 8th. And if in each country the celebrations are held differently (for example, if in Russia March 8th is the day when men give gifts to their friends and beloved girls, wives, mothers and daughters, the day when each of them tries in every possible way to pamper his lady of the heart, in Italy International Women's Day - first of all, an event that returns to draw public attention to the eternal gender issues - discrimination and violence, which women still face too often), then an unchanging symbol of the holiday in any country in the world are flowering branches of mimosa.

But do you know why it is customary to give mimosa on March 8? There are many legends and beliefs about the origin of this tradition, but only one of them is a historically accurate fact: the custom of presenting this flowering branch as a gift to all females appeared in Italy and was introduced in 1946 by an Italian. The idea to choose a mimosa as a symbol of International Women's Day was submitted by the former partisan and communist Teresa Mattei, the head of the Union of Italian Women (Union Donne Italiane), who took an active part in the struggle for gender equality.

Vittoria Tola, current president of Unione Donne Italiane, explained to the Italian edition of ANSA the reasons for this choice: day, March 10, and in which for the first time women took part on an equal basis with men, the members of the Union of Italian Women wanted to distribute flowers along with leaflets, as happened in France. in northern Italy - he also advised women to give violets, as the French communists did. However, Teresa Mattei suggested that Longo choose mimosas: this bright and cheerful flower grew everywhere in Italy and therefore was cheap and bloomed profusely in March. (Tola recalls, that Rome in those years was literally buried in blooming mimosas)".