The main part of this top URL you posted is this:
"Tulips are indeed true perennials," explains Frans Roozen, technical director
of the International Flower Bulb Center in Hillegom, the Netherlands. "Getting
them to bloom in your garden year after year is no problem, if your garden
happens to be located in the foothills of the Himalayas, or the steppes of
eastern Turkey."
On Mon, 18 Aug 2003 18:56:46 -0400, Pelvis Popcan
opined:
Tulips are true perennials, but behave more like annuals in the USA.
I read about it in a book that I don't have with me right now so I
can't reference it, but I did a google search and found a quite a few
articles. Here's two:
http://www.bulb.com/tulips/tulipfavs.asp
http://www.dutchgardens.com/gardenin...p?copy_id=5297
My neighbors planted tulips around their trees and in a bed in their
front yard. They grew beautifully last year. But this year, mostly
just small pieces of foliage grew, and only a few flowers on plants
that were much smaller than the growth from last year. After I read
about the perennial nature of tulips in the US, to me this seems to
corroborate the fact that the bulbs must have split and the small
daughter bulbs only put up a leaf or two of foliage each.
I suppose if I try watering and fertilizing only in the spring when
they first start growing then again in the fall, and leaving them dry
for the summer, they may regrow OK.