Keep
Holiday Greens Looking Their Best
By Melinda Myers
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[December 20, 2022]
Wreaths, door swags, garlands, and containers
filled with evergreens have long been part of winter celebrations
and displays. Keep them fresh and looking their best throughout the
holidays with minimal effort.
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Fresh greenery with pliable branches and firmly
attached needles will last the longest. Check for good color and an
aroma you prefer. Consider buying extra greenery and storing it in
the garage or another cool location. Use these to replace any indoor
greenery that is starting to brown.
Recut the bottom of the stems with a sharp bypass pruner. Totally
submerge the greenery in a tub of room-temperature water overnight
to help rehydrate the needles. Gently crush the cut end to allow it
to better absorb moisture.
Remove the cuttings from the water and once dry, seal in the
moisture by spraying the greens with an anti-transpirant, often
called anti-desiccant. These products seal in moisture, reducing
drying due to warm, dry air indoors and drying winds and sunlight
outside.
Follow label directions for application tips and dilution rates
based on what you are treating. Avoid using these on juniper
berries, cedar and blue spruce. The waxy coating that makes these
look blue can be damaged by these products. Apply anti-desiccant
products outdoors during the day, as light is needed to activate
some of these chemicals. Allow the treated greens to dry for three
to four hours before moving them inside.
Display indoor greenery in cool locations out of direct sunlight.
This reduces moisture loss and extends the life of your garland,
wreaths, and arrangements.
Keep greenery away from heat sources that speed drying, decorative
lights that generate heat, and flames from candles. Check the greens
every few days and replace dry, brittle, and brown cuttings with
fresh greens.
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Outdoor greenery lasts much longer when temperatures
are cooler than indoors. Further extend their longevity by placing
them in more sheltered locations, out of direct sunlight and wind
where they suffer less drying. Avoid hanging wreaths and swags in
front of windows in direct sunlight where the reflected light can
burn the foliage. Use an anti-transpirant on outdoor greenery to
help reduce moisture loss and extend your enjoyment.
Keep outdoor planters of greens looking their best throughout the
winter. Keep the soil moist until it freezes when displaying spruce
tips, cut holiday trees, and evergreen stems in outdoor containers.
If and when the ground freezes, you can stop watering.
A bit of effort goes a long way in extending the beauty of holiday
greenery.
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including
the recently released Midwest Gardener’s Handbook, 2nd Edition and
Small Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses “How to Grow
Anything” instant video and DVD series and the nationally syndicated
Melinda’s Garden Moment TV & radio program. Myers is a columnist and
contributing editor for Birds & Blooms magazine and her website is
www.MelindaMyers.com.
[Photo courtesy of MelindaMyers.com] |