Fall
Planting Provides Months of Continuous Spring Color
By Melinda Myers
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[October 04, 2024]
Welcome spring and create continuous color for
several months with a collection of spring-flowering bulbs. After
planting in the fall, you’ll enjoy an array of flower colors that
combine nicely with other spring-flowering trees, shrubs, and
flowers.
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Start
the season with early blooming snowdrops. As winter fades watch for
the dangling white flowers on six- to ten-inch-tall plants. Include
these small flowers in rock gardens, mixed borders, and informal
landscapes in sunny and part-shade locations.
Include a tapestry of colors with white, purple, lavender, and
yellow crocus. Large Flowering Pickwick crocus offers unique blooms
of white flowers with purple pinstripes. Its striped petals surround
the red-orange stamens making this a standout in any planting.
Crocus are a favorite of critters as well as gardeners so consider
protecting them with a repellent as the leaves emerge in spring.
Look to early, mid, and late spring blooming tulips and daffodil
varieties to maximize the color in your landscape throughout the
spring. Check catalog descriptions and package labels to help you
select an array of bloom times. Longfield Gardens’ Bloom Times Guide
to Spring and Summer Bulbs (Longfield-Gardens.com) can also help you
plan for three months of color in your landscape.
Look to Emperor, Kaufmanniana, and Greigii tulips for
a bit of early spring color. Add some fragrance and showy,
peony-like flowers with Double Early Foxtrot. This award-winning
tulip has sturdy, weatherproof stems that support its loosely cupped
flowers. Its petals contain a range of pink shades from white to
deep rose.
Plant some Darwin Hybrid and Triumph tulips for mid-spring color in
the garden. The two-toned flowers on Apricot Impression seem to glow
and as a Darwin hybrid, they will have a long-lasting presence in
your garden. Finish the spring season with fancy ruffled parrot
tulips, fringed and lily tulips, and more single and double late
bloomers. You’ll enjoy the extended show and late spring flowers to
enjoy in arrangements.
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Don’t overlook daffodils. You’ll find a variety of
flowers with long, short, large, and split trumpets. Daffodil
flowers may be one color, or the trumpet may be a different color
than the color of the surrounding petals. Double varieties add a
unique look to any garden. The early- to mid-spring blooming
Cyclamineus Tete-a-Tete daffodil may be small in stature at seven
inches but the bright yellow flowers and three blossoms per stem
make it visible from a distance.
Combine some Armenian grape hyacinths with mid-spring blooming
tulips, daffodils, and perennials. Their small, cobalt-blue,
fragrant flowers last weeks and look good wherever they are planted.
Bridge spring and summer flower seasons in your garden with Purple
Sensation allium. This late spring blooming bulb has four-inch round
purple flowers high atop 24 to 30” stems. These reliable bloomers
are critter-resistant like daffodils and grape hyacinths. Enjoy them
in your garden, fresh bouquets, and dried flower arrangements.
Make this the year you select and do some fall planting of various
early, mid, and late spring flowering bulbs. You’ll be rewarded with
a burst of early spring color and sustained beauty from a mix of
spring flowering bulbs.
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including
the recently released Midwest Gardener’s Handbook, 2nd Edition and
Small Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses “How to Grow
Anything” DVD instant video series and the nationally syndicated
Melinda’s Garden Moment TV & radio program. Myers is a columnist and
contributing editor for Birds & Blooms magazine and was commissioned
by Longfield Gardens for her expertise to write this article. Her
website is www.MelindaMyers.com.
[Photo courtesy of
Longfield-Gardens.com] |