Extend your enjoyment by including early blooming
bulbs like snowdrops, squills, and winter aconites. Add early, mid,
or late spring blooming tulips and early and mid spring flowering
daffodils for a continuous display of color. Check the package or
catalog description for bloom times.
Create some winning combinations by planting white tulips with grape
hyacinths or yellow daffodils with the equally assertive blue
squills. Plant a fragrant garden bouquet by combining tulips,
daffodils and hyacinths. Select varieties that bloom at the same
time in complementary colors or blends.
Include summer flowering hardy lilies. Many are fragrant and these
stately beauties provide vertical accents in the garden. Cut a few
stems to display in a vase or mix with other flowers in summer
bouquets.
Don’t let hungry animals stop you from brightening your spring with
these bulbs. Include animal resistant bulbs like hyacinths, grape
hyacinths, daffodils, fritillarias, and alliums.
You can plant tulips, crocus, and lilies, just be sure to use
physical barriers like chicken wire or animal repellents like rain
resistant Plantskydd (plantskydd.com). It’s an organic repellent
that comes in both liquid and granular formulations to protect bulbs
animals prefer to eat.
Lay the bulbs out on newspaper, apply the liquid repellent, and
allow them to dry before planting. Add an extra layer of protection
by sprinkling the granular repellent over the soil surface. In
spring, begin protecting the plants before the animals begin
feeding. Follow label directions for proper timing of additional
repellent applications.
Prepare the soil before planting. Work compost, peatmoss, or other
organic matter into the top twelve inches of soil to improve
drainage, a key factor in growing success.
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Wait until the soil is cool to plant your bulbs. This
is usually after the first hard frost or when night temperatures
average between 40 and 50 degrees. Plant the bulbs two to three
times their vertical height deep and at least two to three times
their diameter apart. Try grouping at least six to nine larger
bulbs, like tulips and daffodils, and 15 to 20 smaller bulbs, like
squills and crocus, together for greater impact.
Mix a low nitrogen, slow release fertilizer into the soil surface
and water thoroughly after planting. Continue watering thoroughly
when the soil is dry throughout the fall, while the bulbs grow
roots.
After you enjoy their blooms next spring, leave the leaves intact
until they yellow. Leaves produce the energy needed for next year’s
floral display. Mask the fading foliage by planting winter hardy
pansies with your bulbs in fall, adding color to both fall and
spring gardens. Or plant bulbs amongst perennials. Early spring
flowering perennials double your pleasure, later bloomers extend the
flowering season, and both help hide fading bulb foliage.
Break out your trowel and gloves and get busy planting. You’ll be
glad you did when that first flower appears next spring.
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including
Small Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses “How to Grow
Anything” DVD series and the Melinda’s Garden Moment TV & radio
segments. Myers is a columnist and contributing editor for Birds &
Blooms magazine and was commissioned by Tree World Plant Care for
her expertise to write this article. Her web site is
www.MelindaMyers.com.
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