Improve Watering for Cut Flowers and Plants with a Turkey Baster Hack

As the festive season approaches, we all dust off our less frequently used kitchenware. While seemingly a single-use tool, turkey basters can help us in other areas of the home, too. For instance, you could use them to keep cut flowers fresh for longer. Here’s how: If your floral arrangements are looking a bit limp, they probably need a water change. To do this without messing up your carefully-curated bouquet, use the turkey baster to suck up the old water in the vase and replace it with some fresh stuff.

Fresh water is important for your cut flowers for a few reasons. Flower arrangements are actively decaying, and plants, including cut flowers, are made predominantly of water. When a flower stem or branch is removed from a plant, it starts to lose this water and wilt. However, cut flowers are capable of taking in more water, as long as the stems remain undamaged. This water needs to be regularly replaced to keep it fresh. If you try to remove the water by tipping the vase upside down or taking out the entire bouquet, you risk damaging fragile plant parts. The suction action of a turkey baster makes it the perfect tool for this tricky job.

Baste your blooms

watering a bouquet

To use this hack, insert the thin end of the turkey baster into the mouth of the vase and squeeze the bulb at the other end. Remove the utensil from the vase and deposit the dirty water into a bowl or the kitchen sink. Depending on the size of your baster and vase, you may need to squeeze a few times to remove all the water. Then, reverse the process to put fresh water back into your vase. Alternatively, if you have a hose-style kitchen faucet, use that to gently fill the vase with fresh water. You could also use a watering can with a thin, long funnel.

See also  Is Your Hydrangea Plant Dead or Dormant?

While some suggest switching out your water once a day for a bouquet that stands up straight without wilting, you could easily leave it in the vase for up to a few days. Any kind of baster will do, from a cheap option like this Long Turkey Baster for about $5 on Amazon to the fancy OXO Turkey Baster with Cleaning Brush that costs around $12 at Target. If you decide to use your turkey baster to replace the water in your cut flowers, it’s probably a good idea — hygiene-wise — to stop using it for actual turkey basting.

Authors at GlobalIdeas
Authors at GlobalIdeas

We exist to help communities in the Asia-Pacific make practical improvements to their own health. We believe there is immense potential to join the dots across disciplines to think differently, and we are united by a desire to see better health for all.

Articles: 6446