Plant flower bulbs now for a blast of spring color

Plant flower bulbs now for a blast of spring color

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When flower bulbs bloom, they can be showy, brilliant and bright, serving as the antidote for many gardeners suffering through the winter doldrums. But it takes a bit of thinking ahead to


plant bulbs before the frost, and some patience to wait for them to poke their green stalks out of the cold ground months later. The payoff is that spring riot of color as they bloom from


February into June, often before perennials and grasses. Avid gardeners like Jim Jonker, 72, of Holland, Michigan, appreciate the “delayed gratification” of flower bulb planting.  “You plunk


them in, and then you wait. You think about something else all winter, and then all of a sudden in the spring — boom! — there they are,” he says. “It’s very rewarding.”  CHOOSE THE RIGHT


BULBS FOR YOUR SPACE Most true bulbs — tulips, irises and daffodils — require six hours of sun per day to thrive, return the following year and can be incorporated without detracting from a


landscape design or stealing nutrition from other plants. When planting, make sure to choose a sunny spot. Some bulbs, particularly native ones like Virginia bluebells or camassia, spring


beauty, and trout lily, can be situated in partly shady areas as long as they get enough sun to recharge before trees get their leaves.  Look for bulbs that are firm, with no signs of mold


or rotting, and plan to plant six weeks before the first freeze in your area to give the roots time to establish. If you need to purchase bulbs earlier, store them in the refrigerator to


keep them fresh. If the ground doesn’t freeze where you live, you can give bulbs a dose of cold by refrigerating for eight to 10 weeks and then planting. But avoid storing bulbs with fruit


that emits gases, such as apples, which can cause rot. When planting, look for spots with good drainage and give bulbs a soaking when first planted, but don’t water after that. Jonker


recommends planting bulbs in pots at least 6 to 8 inches in diameter. Plant them, water them and store them in an unheated garage (or your refrigerator) for at least 12 weeks. “In the


spring, take them out and put them in the sun, and you can have beautiful tulips or daffodils anywhere,” says Jonker, the former owner of Jonker’s Garden in Holland, Michigan. You can also


plant them in elevated planters, raised beds or in window boxes.  The Delaware Botanic Gardens at Pepper Creek planted more than 80,000 bulbs last year. Raymond Bojarski for the Delaware


Botanic Gardens at Pepper Creek GO FOR A MORE NATURAL LOOK Stephen Pryce Lea, the director of horticulture at the Delaware Botanic Gardens at Pepper Creek in Dagsboro, Delaware, wanted to


give visitors more early season colors in the mainly native Meadow Garden, designed by the renowned Dutch designer Piet Oudolf, who also created the plan for New York City’s High Line.