Showing posts with label scilla. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scilla. Show all posts

Spring-Blooming Bulbs


Spring blooms come to those who plant fall bulbs

By Amy McDowell

After tearing down the fall bulb display at the garden center where I once worked, we swept up two dozen miscellaneous bulbs from the floor. “You want those?” my boss asked, ready to pitch them from the dustpan into the garbage. Smiling, I gathered them into a paper bag and took them home. It was late in the season and the weather was chilly, but the ground was not yet frozen. I planted them in a small cluster where some annuals had collapsed after a frost. The ragamuffin group would bloom in a haphazard tapestry in the spring, I imagined, but better that they create a goofy patchwork of color in my garden than rot in a landfill.

In the spring, to my surprise and delight, that little cluster of leftover bulbs charmed both me and everyone else who visited my garden. Tiny purple and yellow crocus trumpeted spring from just four inches above the earth, followed by eight or ten daffodils in gold and white and a dozen crisp tulips in red, gold and purple. The sweet fragrance of purple and pink hyacinths could seduce me to visit the riotous hodgepodge bed from the moment I stepped outdoors.

You can’t go wrong with spring bulbs, it turns out. Springtime success will greet you whether it’s 7,000 bulbs in vast beds of color, as I once planted for an employer, or a handful of delicate bluish-purple Scilla siberica next to a path.

Daffodils are my favorite spring-flowering bulbs because they return loyally year after year. Pests won’t dig them up and eat them like they do with tasty tulips, so they multiply over the years, forming generous clumps where a single bulb was once planted. Among the thousands of varieties, you’ll find trumpets, large-cupped, small-cupped, doubles and split coronas. I went crazy for miniature daffodils for several years, growing every one I could find. The most darling, in my book, is 'Tete-a-Tete' for its bright little blooms and short stature. It blooms beautifully with the purple Crocus tommasinianus ‘Ruby Giant’.

I plant a couple dozen tulips each fall to please my husband, who loves them as much as I love daffodils. The peony-flowering varieties planted in the front yard are visible more than a block away.

Finally, I’ll plant a dozen bold orange ‘Treffer’ Asiatic lilies this fall because I’ve been crazy over the Asiatics all season. You won’t find a lot of orange in my garden, but I can surely find a spot for a vivid orange zing. Orange, after all, is the new black, according to my friend Katherine.

Plant some bulbs this fall; the time is right. Plant daffodils, tulips and lilies. Fill the nooks and crannies of your perennial borders with little cuties like Iris reticulata, Pushkinia, Scilla, Galanthus and Crocus. Bulbs are fun, foolproof and rewarding.

Amy McDowell is an Iowa Certified Nursery Professional. She has a degree in horticulture and has worked in the field for ten years. She lives and gardens in Polk County.