Taranaki Daily News

Bringing your garden indoors

Harvesting for the vase ultimately takes away from the atmosphere you have cultivated in your garden, but Julia Atkinson-Dunn finds there are ways to reduce the impact.

- Julia Atkinson-Dunn is a creator and founder of Studio Home. See @studiohome­gardening or studiohome.co.nz

My pathway to growing a garden was fully inspired by the promise of picking for my home, providing a gateway and motivation to learning to grow my own ‘‘soul food’’.

In this article and next week’s followup, I’ll share entry-level tips to harvesting, preparing and displaying your own blooms inside.

It’s an uncomplica­ted activity that offers a reprieve in a busy day and a distractio­n for a busy mind. The growing of ‘‘soul food’’, as opposed to actual ‘‘food’’, is of different but worthy value to your wellbeing.

Abundant stems of flowers in the garden are equally enjoyable in a vase, yet filling your home with flowers undoubtedl­y causes an aesthetic blow to the beds they came from. Harvesting for the vase ultimately takes away from the atmosphere you have cultivated in your garden, but there are ways to reduce the impact.

The No 1 option would be to nominate a bed as a ‘‘cutting garden’’ that you can rampage through with snips and not pillage your general gardenscap­e.

The second alternativ­e is taking the time to nibble blooms from the back of the plant and spots with less visual impact.

Sometimes, I’ll even wait until I know a flower has days left of being at its best, snip it off and pop into a shortlived arrangemen­t, getting the best of it for inside and out.

Vases and support

Anything goes. Glasses, mugs, jugs, jars, bottles and any other watertight vessel. Part of the fun and creativity of displaying your flowers is to play around with what they are in.

Vessels with narrow tops are handy for supporting stems, however you can’t fit as many in. Wide openings present a new challenge, as they remove a lot of support but, in my eyes, open up the potential for that lovely rambling vibe.

Remember those heavy, spiky metal squares and rounds at your gran’s house? These are called ‘‘flower frogs’’, or commonly now known as kenzan, and are very handy. Scan online trading platforms and second-hand shops for the originals or search online for the modern versions. They simply sit in the bottom of your vase and you build your arrangemen­t by spiking stems into their centres.

Another fantastic, liberating option is chicken wire. I prefer the coated type and roughly cut up a square of it, guestimati­ng about 1.5 times the size of the vessel it needs to fill. I then crudely curl it over to create a pillow form and push it inside the vessel. This acts as a reusable and super effective support for stems in all manner of vases.

If you are dealing with longer, heavier stems, you should add some extra support by crisscross­ing the rim of the vase with florists’ ‘‘pot tape’’. It is skinny, very sticky tape that you can easily buy online. However, mostly, I find that the chicken wire can be jammed pretty well into the vases if the top is narrower than the base.

Tips for harvesting from your garden

For picking, it’s often easier to use fine-nosed snips, or even scissors, as opposed to secateurs, which are heavier and harder to be precise. It’s best to pick outside the heat of the day – morning or evening – to give your flowers the best chance of survival.

When harvesting blooms, you are aiming to select for optimum potential of vase life, length of stem and cut in a way that encourages your plant to keep flowering. To be honest, mostly you just have to take what you can get and short stems with overly mature blooms might just have to be it.

As plants move through their seasonal life cycle, flowering stems seem to get shorter, so don’t stress, just make cuter posies. In most situations, choosing blooms that have opened about one-third to a half, with the remainder still in bud, will give you an advantage to lasting longer in a vase. This is particular­ly true for foxgloves, delphinium­s and snapdragon­s.

Once flowers have been visited by pollinator­s, their vase life is greatly reduced. Others need to be newly, but fully, open and have mature colour and strong stems rather than floppy, juvenile ones. This is relevant for many plants like dahlias, cosmos and also umbellifer­s such as fennel and queen anne’s lace.

Once you have chosen your flowering stem, slide your snips down to where it meets the main stem and make a clean cut.

It’s in this little intersecti­on that many flowering plants will be encouraged to generate new growth, leading to renewed display for your garden and another round of potentials for the vase.

For roses, look to cut just above the node you see on the stem as this is where new growth will generate.

For diligent harvesting practice, you can scout the garden with a half-filled bucket of water, to give instant relief for flowers while in transit. If you don’t muck around too much I find that a trug, or just my hands, does a good job getting them from garden to kitchen.

Conditioni­ng

As soon as you have picked your bunch, pop the stems promptly into a jug or sink of water to keep them happy. They love it right up to their necks, if possible. Some plants are sulky and give you a very short window after cutting before they will start to irretrieva­bly wilt if not sunk into water quickly.

Before you set up your vase, whip through the stems and condition them ready for arranging by stripping and trimming all leaves, branches, or thorns that you think will sit below the waterline. Woody stems (like branches of blossom, hydrangeas and roses) are helped along by cutting twice. Once across the stem on a 45-degree angle, then again, around 5cm or more vertically ‘‘up’’ the stem to split it open, allowing for greater surface area to hydrate from.

Other flowers (like poppies and hellebores) benefit from a quick sear in boiling water to help prevent them wilting in the vase. A 10-second dip of the bottom 5cm of a stem before going straight into a vase of cold water can work well.

Some plants like daffodils and euphorbia are super sappy and should be handled with care, avoiding getting the sap on your skin. Cleanly snip them just once, then pop into their own jug of water to allow the sap to dispel and the stem to slightly seal, before including in your arrangemen­t. The sap can be toxic to your other blooms, so this little rest period is helpful.

If you are finding your favourite garden flowers are not doing well in a vase, a quick search online for cutting tips is well worth it.

Next time, I’ll offer ideas on arranging and displaying your flowers around your home.

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 ??  ?? From the top: Use the kitchen sink to plunge your flowers into water immediatel­y you get them inside, chicken wire and ‘‘flower frogs’’ are excellent for holding your flowers in position in a vase, which can be as simple as a preserving jar.
From the top: Use the kitchen sink to plunge your flowers into water immediatel­y you get them inside, chicken wire and ‘‘flower frogs’’ are excellent for holding your flowers in position in a vase, which can be as simple as a preserving jar.
 ?? PHOTOS: JULIA ATKINSON-DUNN ?? A trug is a great way to get flowers from the garden to the kitchen.
PHOTOS: JULIA ATKINSON-DUNN A trug is a great way to get flowers from the garden to the kitchen.

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