Gerbera Daisy Care Trimming Dead Flowers

Inspect your gerbera daisy for foliage imperfections each week.
Gerbera daisy care trimming dead flowers. Immerse the trimmed stem immediately into a broad bottomed vase with water. Separate the foliage and find leaves that are dead beginning to wither or that appear diseased. Use a sharp knife to cut these leaves 1 8 inch from the base of the plant where they rejoin the stem. This will make the daisy plant invest energy in creating new flowers rather than producing seeds in the spent flowers.
To get the best out of a gerbera daisy plant give it proper care and prune it annually. Remove the dead flowers before they begin producing seeds. Keeping your gerbera daisies properly pruned keeps the plants healthy and may encourage a second blooming period. Leaving dead plant matter in the bed can cause a breeding ground for diseases such as botrytis blight.
Use a clean sharp knife to cut off dead discolored or damaged leaves. Gerbera daisies are very popular house and garden plants that bloom in a variety of bright shades of pink orange yellow and red. You can easily tear off the stem which connects the dead flower to the soil. Pinch off individual dead flowers with your fingers or hand pruners.
Spread the leaves apart gently with your fingers. Cut gerbera flowers freely throughout the blooming season for your stunning indoor arrangements. Step 1 examine the gerbera daisy plant. Use clean sharp shears.