Watch our latest Mornings with Mayesh featuring our very own flower expert, David Dahlson. We chatted about the current flower situation, flower shortages, pricing, flower substitutions, working with your rep, processing flowers, making sustainable changes, and more. It was truly a great episode packed with tons of important information! If you have any other questions, be sure to post them in the comments!
Here is the podcast, video replay, and show notes:
Daffodils should always be cut and maintained in separate buckets from other flowers. Thye produce a milky sap that can be detrimental to many other flowers.
Eucalyptus exudes an oily vapor, especially in warmer temperatures that can be very injurious to roses, causing them to “fall asleep”, becoming soft and unproductive. Best to keep eucalyptus apart from the flowers, especially roses.
Tulips are phototropic, meaning they grow towards the light. Therefore, they should be stored in the dark, or with a light source directly overhead. If placed near a window they will grow and bend towards the light. On the other hand, there is nothing so delightful as a bouquet of French Tulips writhing like snakes towards the light from a side window.
Tulips tend to keep growing after they are cut, so stems can grow in an arrangement, perhaps distorting the design. A pin placed through the stem about a quarter inch below the flower helps counteract this.
Incidentally, if using Cyclamen blooms, a pinhole created about a quarter inch from the bottom of the stem really makes this a viable flower.
Calla Lilies are also phototropic, though not as much as tulips. If straight stems are required, the callas need to be wrapped tight around the length of the stems, prior to hydrating. The blooms should be exposed. A strong overhead light source such as a skylight will help. Gro-lites are a useful and readily available tool to help with this.
Of course these traits can be gamed to create curved stems, stems with S bends and so forth.
Snapdragons are geotropic, as are gladiolus. This means they are prone to the forces of gravity, and if lain horizontal, the growing tips will curl upwards, which is generally not a desirable characteristic. These flowers should never be in an unrestrained horizontal position. They are best kept upright whenever possible.
You were probably wondering where the sex comes into this. In the evolution of flowers, the drive to create fruit, and sustain the species is a key element in getting flowers to open faster than normal.
Although it is counter-intuitive, one needs to stress the flower so that it thinks it needs to open so it can be pollinated, its last act of life as it were. To do this one withholds water and adds heat. This is never recommended except in extreme circumstances. But if you have an imminent event, it may be necessary.
This only applies to hardier flowers such as Carnations, Asters, Gyp, Roses (not garden roses), Lilies, and Chrysanthemums.
In these extreme cases, the flowers should be lain in a very warm place 80-90° F with sleeves on but not in direct sunlight. They need to get quite warm and almost limp. The flowers should then be cut to a length close to the final size. This is so the hydration will be as rapid as possible, without expending unnecessary time and energy hydrating a long and unnecessary stem. The stems should be in water as deep as possible, without getting blooms wet. The water should be very warm to which one drop of dish detergent per gallon of water has been added. The detergent acts as a surfactant, breaking the molecular tension of the water, which will then pass through the stems with less resistance.
Carnations, Asters and Chrysanthemums can be placed in sunlight provided there is plenty of water in the bucket. Roses should be in a hot location but no direct sunlight. Roses should have all their guard petals removed, roses with a heavy petal count can have 7 or 8 petals removed. Lilies should have any unnecessary buds removed (ie ones that will never open) and can be in sunlight with a plastic cover over the flowers. To aid with opening, as soon as the buds have cracked, it helps to remove the stamens. This also stops pollen from staining blooms.
Remember this is never recommended but sometimes extraordinary events need extraordinary measures. As a guide, roses usually take five days to open, carnations 8 days, tight peonies 6-8 days, chrysanthemums 6 days, asters and gyp 4 days, and therefore need to be ordered accordingly. Ultimately a cooler is highly recommended as it allows for full control over the desired aperture of the blooms.
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