Saudi Arabian ‘city of roses’ where farmers bottle flowers’ aroma and climate change looms
The hills of Taif, Saudi Arabia, turn pink in spring with the blooming of roses used for perfume. But erratic weather is affecting harvests

After decades spent pruning thorny bushes and working arduous harvests, Khalaf Allah al-Talhi has perfected the art of capturing the fragrant aroma of the desert rose in a bottle.
“I love roses and take care of them more than I care for my own children,” the 80-year-old says from his flower farm in Taif, in western Saudi Arabia, known as “the city of roses”.
Some 800 flower farms in the hills of Taif produce around 300 million of the area’s signature pink roses annually. By his own estimates, Talhi grows around five to six million of those.
The arrival of spring’s mild climate is met with the blooming of roses that carpet the vast, rolling desert landscapes with vibrant shades of pink.

The blooms are then hand-picked from daybreak to late in the evening by an army of labourers.