Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
Hi this is Yolanda Vanveen and in this segment we are going to talk about how to keep a dozen
roses fresh. Now anyone that has received a dozen roses knows the feeling that you get
when you smell them and they are just so beautiful and it is just such a treat to get flowers
but once you have them in your house the question is how do I make them last longer? Well there
is a few tricks that you can use to get your roses to last a little bit longer. So the
first thing that I do when I get the roses is I make sure and change out the water every
two to three days and give them fresh water. You can add bleach, you can add aspirin but
all that is doing is making the water stop from going bad and slimy. So if you actually
change out the water and give them fresh water in the end that is what the roses want. Another
trick too with roses is cut them under the water so fill the dish with water and actually
cut the stems one or two inches underneath the water and that way the roses will soak
up the water up to here and even though you take them out of the water and put them in
the vase they have still got water in the stem and not air and they seem to last a lot
longer that way. I always kind of look through my roses too and I clean them up so a lot
of times they won't look good but if you notice it is just a few petals so if you just pull
off the couple of the petals that are turning brown you'll notice that you still can get
a lot of time out of them, one or two more weeks. I have already had these a week so
for roses that is pretty good in the middle of Winter and they seem to last a lot longer
that way. I notice too here and there I get a droopy rose and a lot of times this happens
because the roses have been in a cooler for a long time and as soon as they get into the
warm air they don't really soak up water or anything they just droop. A lot of times when
they are shipped in from South America you will get a lot of droopy ones so you can try
to cut the stems and you can try to freshen them up but a lot of times once they droop
that is it, they're gone so the most important thing that you can do is actually cool them
when you are gone so find the coolest room in your house or even outside if it is it's
the Winter time but don't let them freeze. So if it is a warm Summer day and the house
is really warm but the basement is cool then keep them down in the basement when you are
at work or if it is the Winter time and the house is a little bit warm but outside it
is not freezing yet it is still cool then put them out on your deck or just under the
eves or somewhere where they can stay cool because it is just like putting them in a
cooler and that way a lot of times you can get one to two weeks more out of them just
by keeping them cool when you are not around and then just put them back in the house when
you get home and that way you can enjoy them for a longer period of time.