It’s the time of the year when tropical flower arrangements are hot, hot items in the flower shop. Birds of paradise, orchids, protea, anthuriums, dendrobium and other exotic tropical flowers are big ticket flowers used in a wide variety of tropical arrangements. One of my favorite tropical flowers is the bird of paradise. It’s a stunning beauty that brings so much to any tropical arrangement. For this reason, I recently asked Regina Berryman (AIFD, AAF) to show me some of her design techniques for creating beautiful tropical flower arrangements using bird of paradise. Here is her technique for opening bird of paradise to reveal its finest qualities.
Opening Bird of Paradise To Reveal High Quality
Regina has worked with tropical flowers for many years now. Being less experienced with tropical flowers, Regina decided to show me how to open bird of paradise in a way that reveals its best quality and eliminates any flaws from shipping or packaging. First, place the stem of the bird of paradise firmly between your legs. Place both thumbs on the crease (the opening) and gently pry the crease open. Next place your thumbs together under the “heart” and raise your thumbs at the same time. This allows you to raise the beautiful part of the flower out of its shell and strip it of the lower quality flowers.
Next, oddly enough, strip the lower quality flowers. These are the light orange to white colored flowers that are next to or against the more brightly colored orange/red flowers. Since the vibrantly colored flowers give bird of paradise its appeal, strip the less colorful ones by taking a firm hold, gently pulling straight back toward the stem, then pulling the flower straight out once you have loosened it enough to be removed all at once. If you do not pull toward the stem, you run the risk of ripping the flower toward the tightly clustered base instead of removing it.
I have never seen this before, was this still closed that you had to open it up like that??? Sorry a bit confused I have had these in arrangements before but didn’t relies that they had to be opened up like that before using.
Yes ma’am! Bird of paradise arrives closed. It takes about one minute to open them up and prep them for use in a tropical arrangement. This extra TLC is very worth it though! The brightly colored flowers you’re used to seeing in your tropical flower arrangements is actually the heart of the flower!
Then what? I am confused. It looks like you then separate each petal. But the final picture looks like you do not. I have struggled with Birds for ages. I usually lose at least 2 out of ten stems. They wither and never seem to thrive.
The key is recutting the stems as soon as you get them. Once they are recut you need to place them in cool it tepid water that contains floral preservative. Some designer will leave the flowers closed until they are ready to use them in a flower arrangement. Make sure the Bird of Paradise is not exposed to rapid temperature changes.
I forgot to mention before you try to open the bracts run lukewarm water over the heads.