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Delivery Available As Soon As Saturday 11/22/2008

  Cut Flower and House Plant Care Tips
 
 

Flower Facts >> Care Tips


Most fresh cut flowers last from 2 to 5 days with proper care. Some flowers will last even longer if you re-cut the stems and place in clean water. Never place an arrangement in direct sun or near a heating vent.
    Add water daily If you have received the flowers as a wrapped bouquet or in a box, you must recut each stem. Fill a clean vase with and water and floral preservative. Use a sharp knife and cut approximately ½ inch off each stem at a very steep angle. Immediately place the flowers into the vase. Fill the container full of water everyday.

Rose Care

    If you have received these flowers as a wrapped bouquet or in a box, you must re-cut each stem. Fill a clean vase with warm water and floral preservative. Use a sharp knife a cut approximately ½” off each stem at a very steep angle. Immediately place the flowers in the vase. Fill the container full of water everyday. When available, we love to use garden roses. They are more fragrant, fuller and have much more character than their more civilized, cultivated cousins. The outer guard petals and open fragile nature are part of their charm. Please appreciate their unique beauty and romantic qualities. Re-cut stems in 3 to 4 days and place in clean water. If a rose has wilted. It is not properly taking up water. Repeat the cutting process and place the rose into hot (not scalding) water in a deep vase. You may also cut the stem and submerge the entire rose in a tub or sink where it will lay flat for 2 hours.

Tulip care

    If you have received these tulips as a wrapped bouquet or in a box, you must re-cut each stem. Fill a clean vase with warm water and floral preservative. Use a sharp knife a cut approximately ½” off each stem at a very steep angle. Immediately place the flowers in the vase. Fill the container full of water everyday. Most fresh cut tulips last from 2 to 5 days with proper care. Never place arrangement in direct sun or near a heating vent. Re-cut stems in 3 to 4 days and place in clean water. Tulips have a mind of their own. The bloom will open up immediately when it is warm and re-close when it is cool. They might droop over for the first few hours after cutting and then will stand straight up or follow the light. Parrot tulips naturally and gracefully nod their heads down

Plant Basket Care

    Your plant basket will have 2 or more separate plants chosen for texture, color and beauty. Each plant will need to be cared for separately. Individual plants are in plastic pots with deep plastic liners, to allow for individual watering without removing them from the basket. To avoid water damage on furniture: water the basket at the sink and remove the moss from the plants to ensure each is receiving the proper water without overflow. Never let a plant remain in standing water, or become too dry. The plants in your basket will not necessarily dry out at the same time so each one will need to be checked individually about 2 to 3 times a week. Water when the soil surface has dried out slightly. Blooming plants need bright, indirect sunlight; green plants can have less. Use a balanced fertilizer once a month or dilute and use a weak solution at every watering. Air circulation is important. But a cold draft or hot air from a heat source is stressful to all plants.

Orchids

    Orchids are easy care plants that typically bloom for three to ten weeks. With a little attention they will last for years. Place your orchids in bright indirect light away from drafts. An ideal temperature range is 65 to 85 degrees. Avoid any temperature extremes or placing orchids near heating/cooling vents. Orchids need to be watered every five to seven days. They need perfect drainage. Do not leave potted orchids in standing water. Terra cotta pots can be put in the sink to allow complete drainage. If your orchid is in an arrangement or basket, remove it for watering. Drain any water from plastic liners.

    Most varieties of orchids, after blooming, need their flower spike cut off. Phalaenopsis orchids should be cut just below the lowest flower, and ¼ inch about the next node. After the secondary spike has finished flowering, cut the entire spike back to the base. A new spike should grow from that node. With proper care your orchid will re-bloom once to several times a year. Varieties vary. Orchids prefer to be root bound and repotting is only necessary about every three years.