DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 582 KB)
Is It Permissible To Add Water To A Vase Of Hadasim or Flowers On Shabbat

One of the prohibitions on Shabbat is that of Zorei'a, planting or watering seeds for them to grow. The question arises whether one is allowed to take herbs or plants, such as Hadasim, and put them in water on Shabbat to prevent wilting. We deal with a case of plants that are specifically intended for fragrance, and are thus not considered Muktzeh. Would it be permitted on Shabbat to fill a vase with water and place Hadasim in the vase?

The Shulchan Aruch explicitly writes (321:11) that one may water a plant that is no longer attached to the ground. Thus, one may add water to a Hadas branch, for example, or place it in a new vase with water, on Shabbat.

However, certain flowers, such as gardenias, are often placed into water in order for the plant to open. Chacham Ovadia Yosef, in Yechaveh Da'at, as well as Rabbi Moshe Halevi, in Menuchat Ahava, rule that it is forbidden to place such a flower in water on Shabbat. Although placing a plant in water to prevent wilting is permissible, one may not put a flower in water on Shabbat for it to open. Thus, if one removes such a flower from the vase to smell it, he may not return it to the vase if it had yet to open.

Summary: One may place a plant in a vase with water on Shabbat to prevent wilting, provided that it is intended specifically for fragrance, and so it is not Muktzeh. One may not, however, place a flower such as a gardenia in water on Shabbat for it to open.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Removing a Teabag From a Teacup on Shabbat
Borer – Removing a Fly From Soup or From a Beverage on Shabbat
Halachot of Borer as They Apply to Eating Soup
Borer – Separating Food Which One Dislikes From Food Which He Likes
Borer – If One Separated Food and Then Decides Not to Eat
Borer – Peeling More Fruits Than are Needed for the Current Meal
Borer – Separating Foods for Somebody Else
Borer – Separating Foods That are Together on a Plate But Not Mixed
Borer – Removing Edible Food From Inedible Food
Borer – The Status of Food That Was Separated in Forbidden Fashion on Shabbat
Borer – Peeling on Onion on Shabbat
Is it Permissible to Insulate a Pot of Food With Towels on Shabbat?
If A Blech Had Been Placed on a Stove Before Shabbat and Then Fell Off
The Shabbat Haftara Reading
May One Open a Door on Shabbat if it Has Shelves with Mukseh Items?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found