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Sugar and a coin can keep cut tulips fresh

**FOR USE WITH AP LIFESTYLES** **FILE ** Colorful tulips are in blossom on the lawn of the Statehouse in Montpelier, Vt. in this Thursday, May 4, 2006 file photo. Tulips make a great centerpiece whether they are bought from a florist or picked from the garden. (AP Photo/Toby Talbot, FILE)

**FOR USE WITH AP LIFESTYLES** **FILE ** Colorful tulips are in blossom on the lawn of the Statehouse in Montpelier, Vt. in this Thursday, May 4, 2006 file photo. Tulips make a great centerpiece whether they are bought from a florist or picked from the garden. (AP Photo/Toby Talbot, FILE)

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**FOR USE WITH AP LIFESTYLES** **FILE ** An orange tulip sits in a bed of flowers near the Pella Historical Villiage in this Wednesday, April 28, 2005 file photo, in Pella, Iowa. Tulips make a great centerpiece whether they are bought from a florist or picked from the garden. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, FILE)

**FOR USE WITH AP LIFESTYLES** **FILE ** An orange tulip sits in a bed of flowers near the Pella Historical Villiage in this Wednesday, April 28, 2005 file photo, in Pella, Iowa. Tulips make a great centerpiece whether they are bought from a florist or picked from the garden. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, FILE)

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AP file photos
Tulips make a great centerpiece whether they are bought from a florist or picked from the garden.

AP file photos Tulips make a great centerpiece whether they are bought from a florist or picked from the garden.

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It's spring and cut flowers are all the rage. How long they last is up to you.

For roses, carnations and mixed arrangements, the key is a clean vase, cool water and stems that are cut before adding to the vase.

Tulips, however, may need some extra attention. A few simple steps will extend the life of these spring gems:

n Store-bought tulips should have flower heads that are closed and show only a bit of their color.

n Before putting tulips in a vase, the stems should be cut with a sharp knife to allow them the maximum amount of water absorption. Fill a clean vase with cool water. Remove any foliage that will be underwater.

n Tulips take on a life of their own in an arrangement. Despite being cut, their stems continue to grow and they lean toward light and bend over time. So today's arrangement may be tomorrow's do-over.

n Cut tulips don't react well to heat. Don't allow the room to get hot and keep them out of direct sunlight.

n Like other store-bought flowers, tulips usually come with nutritional packets that are added to the water. If not, Shelly Kolean, manager of Nelis' Dutch Village, a popular tulip grower in the Lake Michigan shoreline community of Holland, Mich., suggests adding 1 teaspoon of sugar and a penny to the bottom of the vase. The sugar adds nutrition and the penny's alloys provides minerals, she says.

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