Freshly cut roses can brighten up a room, but sometimes they can wilt too early. However this doesn’t mean they’re dead and can’t be restored to their former glory.
In a video posted to the Floristry Market TikTok page, florist Emma from Lily & Bee revealed the easy trick you can try to get those roses standing back up tall. Luckily, you won’t need any chemicals or flower feed to help. This is how you can revive wilting roses.
If your shop-bought roses aren’t standing tall as long as you’d hoped, wilting some time over night, Emma’s hack is incredibly accessible. The florist explained that flowers can wilt overnight due to an airlock at the top of the stem.
Airlocks in flower stems will prevent water uptake and cause wilting. These form when air enters the water-conducting vessels of the stem, particularly after cutting.
This happens because the stem, when cut, creates a partial vacuum. When the cut end is exposed to air, atmospheric pressure forces air into the stem, creating the airlock.
So to help revive the roses, the airlock will need to burst. To do this, Emma advised boiling a kettle of water.
In a bowl or a bucket, pour around two and a half centimetres – or an inch – of boiling water. Plunge the roses into the water for between five to ten seconds.
Emma explained that this will burst the airlock in the stem. Once the roses have been dipped in the boiling water, take each flower out of the water and lay them down and straighten the head.
Next, take a piece of brown paper or newspaper and roll the rose up, making sure that the flower’s head is nice and straight. Use a bit of tape to hold the paper together.
Then fill a bucket with cold water, place the roses in there and leave for a couple of hours. Emma explained that after a couple of hours the roses should be revived.
She said: “But you can’t do that if you’ve gone away for the weekend or something like that, but if it’s just overnight, that’s what it is, they’ve got an airlock.”