Flower Processing
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Transcript Flower Processing
Post-Harvest Physiology
Flower Processing
Floral Design
Ornamental Horticulture
Plant Physiology
General Background Info:
Fresh Flower Food
Flower food contains:
a bio-inhibitor
like bleach to kill bacteria
a sugar compound for the
flower food
helps flowers open
an acidifier
to maintain the pH level
General Background Info:
Flower Plumbing
Xylem & Phloem
These are the tubes
that move water and
food products up
and down the stem
of the plant.
General Background Info:
Old, Dead Flowers
Ethylene
This is the aging hormone gas
from plants.
It causes flower blooms to open.
It can also cause premature
aging of flowers.
Step by Step:
When Flowers arrive:
Processing Flowers
1. Debunch
Take flowers out of plastic sleeves to release any
ethylene gas.
Cut open the bundles so the blooms have room to
open and breath.
2. Cut & Clean Stems
Make a fresh cut, about 1 inch from the bottom to
provide a new water source for the flower stem.
Remove any lower leaves that will be underwater.
Step by Step:
When Flowers arrive:
Condition Flowers
3. Place in flower solution
Be sure flowers are able to “drink” the flower
solution for at least 1 hour at room temperature.
Step by Step:
After Processing:
Storing Flowers
4. After drinking for an hour, its
time to “harden” the flowers.
Place them in the cooler!
Most common flowers should be
stored at 32 – 38 degrees F.
Special Circumstances
Tropical Flowers
Store at temperatures between
55 – 75 degrees F
Keep air humid
mist with water
Special Circumstances
Curving Stems
For roses and tulips, leave the plastic sleeves on
while letting them ‘drink’ the floral solution, to prevent
curving stems.
Special Circumstances
Stripping roses
Be careful not to strip the ‘bark’ because the xylem is right
below the surface, rather than in the center of the stem.
Special Circumstances
Gerbera Daisies:
Use chicken wire to support the flower heads to
prevent bent neck.
Also, keep them in just enough water, about 2 – 4
inches. Their stems are spongy and absorb lots of
water, which can cause them to wilt prematurely.
Storing Foliage
Greens, like leather leaf and other plumosa ferns,
can be stored in the cooler without a water bucket.
Keep foliage wet, hose down the bunches.
Keep foliage wrapped in plastic bags inside the
boxes to prevent drying out.
Tropisms
Tropisms is when flower
stems curve.
We want to prevent this
problem when storing
flowers.
Phototropism
This is when flowers curve
towards a light source.
like turning toward a window
Tropisms
Geotropism
This is when flowers curve up
away from gravity.
growing upwards, when laying down