No it will not. But don't cut all the leaves off with the flower. Let the leaves stay on the plant until they turn yellow and wither. They're needed to produce food for the bulb to store for next year's plant.
There are chemicals in soap that can harm not just flowers but animals too. Flowers need soil, water, sunlight, and air to live. Not BATHS from soap. It WILL kill the flower. It will kill the flower whether it is cut or not.
which flower? cut or potted?
Broccoli curd is a flower bud. For use it is cut before it expands into a flower.
Cut the flower and stem off and allow the foliage to grow. Water and feed naturally until the leave show signs of yellowing. Allow the bulb to die back naturally by withholding water and then the cycle will repeat itself.
If you're referring to tulips that are in pots, still attached to their bulbs, yes. You can either plant them in the spring or in the fall. If you plan on planting them in the fall, remove the bulbs from their location and place them in a bag of soil and leave in a dark, damp location until fall.
Same can and some cant
There are chemicals in soap that can harm not just flowers but animals too. Flowers need soil, water, sunlight, and air to live. Not BATHS from soap. It WILL kill the flower. It will kill the flower whether it is cut or not.
When the flower is dead, cut it off unless you are hybridizing. Let the leaves alone till they turn yellow and brown. Other than that, no pruning is needed.
When the bloom begging to wilt.
If you are referring to Spanish Bluebells, they do not have a relationship to trees. They are a perennial flower that grows from a bulb.
If you're speaking of the bulb plants like daffodils, tulips and daffodils, don't cut them prematurely. You can cut the dead flower and its stem right after the flower dies. This prevents it from wasting its energy making seeds instead of storing food in the bulb for next year's plant. Let the leaves stay on the plant to make the food for storage - until they turn yellow and wither up.
After you cut a tulip flower off of the plant, the leaves start to send nutrients back to the bulb to store for next year's flower. If you cut the leaves off along with the flower, your tulips will continually grow smaller each year. If you leave the stem and let it go to seed, they will also grow smaller next year.
A cut rose (and most other cut flowers) are in the process of dying as soon as they are cut from the main plant. However, a rose can last up to two weeks with a little TLC. Florist quality cut flower food (CFF) offers three things that help extend the life of cut flowers: a bacteriacide, a pH adjuster and sucrose which the flower uses for food when removed from the plant . Always ask for a packet of CFF whenever you purchase cut flowers. The only cut flowers that do not need the CFF are spring bulb flowers such as tulips, hyacinth and iris. However, they do still benefit from the bacteriacide and the pH adjuster. Cut bulb flowers contain food in their leaves, so never remove all the leaves from them. An interesting thing about cut bulb flowers is that because they contain their own food source in their leaves, they are the only flowers to actually continue to grow for a time after being removed from the main plant. A tulip may actually grown an additional 2" after it's cut. If a rose droops it's because the flower head is not receiving water. This is due to a blockage in the stem, either from an 'air embolism' (air bubble) or a plug of bacteria. Cut off 1/2-1" from the stem end and place the flower into a container of fresh treated water (with CFF). Support the bend head to keep it straight or else the water may not get past the kink in the stem. Allow the rose to re-hydrate like this for 1-2 hours, then replace into the arrangement.
which flower? cut or potted?
none. bleach will damage living flowers. if you add a teaspoon to a vase with cut flowers it will kill the bacteria in the water there by prolonking cut flowers shelf life
you need glucose solution and a cut flower
Broccoli curd is a flower bud. For use it is cut before it expands into a flower.