Quick Fix: Plumping up the Flowers | WHITE HOMES

Welcome to the weekend! Whoot! I’m back today with a super quick flower tip. I shared this on social media this week but got a lot of questions so I thought more photos would be helpful.

If you love hydrangeas as much as I do (and who doesn’t, for real) then you’ll love this tip. I hear it works for other flowers like roses as well.

I love this because I used to hate when I’d buy a bunch of flowers at the store (or cut them from the yard) and then they’d droop within a day or two. This little trick allows you to keep them (hydrangeas at least) for 5-7 days, sometimes more.

Here’s what I’m talking about – see the sad little one in the bottom corner?:

prolong life of cut flowers

Before this trick that one would have been tossed in the trash. Sometimes it happens within a day of bringing them home!

Well, as you can tell from their name – hydrangeas LOVE water. It’s kind of hard to give them too much (at least after they’re cut). The first thing you’ll want to do to plump them back up is snip just a little bit off their stem. (This helps prolong flowers in general.) Then you just soak them in water.

Here’s that droopy one and another one that was looking slightly sad in their bath:

perking up hydrangeas

I use cool water. You’ll want it to cover them at least most of the way. I kind of push them down in the water so I don’t have to use a ton of it.

You’ll want to make sure the flower and the stem are both in there. Timing is different for every one – some perk up in 20 minutes, some I leave in there and just check back to see when they are plump again.

Here’s the same flowers after they’ve soaked up the water:

perking up hydrangeasAwesome, eh? It’s like magic! :)

You can do the same flower more than once – just be sure to clip some off the stem first.

I find that you can keep doing it for awhile, but they just don’t last as long the older the blooms get. I’ve had these for almost a week now: 

making flowers last longer

And each one has been bathed at least once. :) It’s different every time I buy or cut them really – some hydrangeas last for five days without needing a bath, some need it within a day or so.

When I mentioned this trick on Facebook, a reader mentioned a method she uses – she said to snip them down and replace the water in the vase with HOT water, then put the flowers back in. I tried that because it would be a lot faster, but it didn’t work for me. The first photo with the droopy one up above is actually after I tried that method. (Hours later.)

So I don’t know what I did wrong but for some reason it didn’t work for me – but I’ll try it again! As I mentioned, I hear this works for other flowers as well. It never hurts to try, right? It’s worth it to get a few extra days out of these beauties. :)

Any tips you use to prolong the life of your flowers? If I don’t have the packet of flower preservatives that come with them, I’ll sometimes use ground up aspirin. I’m not sure if it really helps or not. I’ve also heard clear soda and even vodka work in the water as well. Cheers!

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