A head of romaine lettuce is about 95% water. Celery is 95%. Cucumbers are 96%. Even carrots are close to 90%.
That water is not just content. It's structure. It's what gives produce its crispness, color, and flavor. Lose the water, and you lose the freshness.
Unfortunately, your refrigerator is very good at removing moisture. (And that's not good for produce, especially those veggies that contain high levels of water.)
So why does produce go bad so fast? All living plant tissue loses water to the surrounding air. Even after harvest, vegetables continue to release moisture, especially when the air around them is dry.
Refrigerators run on cold, dry air. That air has a constant moisture deficit. It pulls water vapor out of produce through its cell walls, lowering the water pressure inside the plant tissue.
That water pressure is what makes greens crisp and vegetables crunchy. When it drops, texture breaks down. Lettuce wilts. Celery bends. Broccoli goes soft.
This spoilage spiral is not caused by bacteria. It's your veggies dehydrating.
For most fresh vegetables, the ideal storage humidity is between 90% and 95%. Most home refrigerators run between 30% and 50% humidity, even with the crisper drawer vent set to high.
That gap is why your produce goes bad faster at home than it does in the store.
Grocery stores maintain high humidity through active misting. That spray of water vapor continuously restores moisture to the air around the produce, which keeps it fresh even after sitting out for hours.
At home, there's been no equivalent. Until now.
Fridge Hydration is the category that closes the gap. Cold plus hydration working together, in one system, inside the crisper drawer.
Skipper releases purified water vapor into your crisper, raising the humidity around your produce to levels that significantly slow dehydration.
The science is straightforward. The result is unmistakable. Produce that stays fresh up to 3x longer, because it's finally stored in the right environment.
Skipper. The mister for your crisper.
Why does humidity matter for produce?
Humidity helps vegetables hold onto moisture, which keeps their structure, texture, and nutrients intact.
What happens in a low-humidity fridge?
Produce loses water quickly, which leads to wilting, softening, and faster spoilage.