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[email protected] 25-10-2006 09:45 AM

saving tulip and daffodil bulbs over winter
 
Here in Central New York (Zone 5), it is pretty much too late to plant
tulip and daffodil bulbs. I received them late and it's been raining
almost nonstop, with temperatures from the low 40s to mid50s. Is it
safe to plant these bulbs, or should they be preserved until spring?
If I have to preserve them over winter, how do I do that?


JoeSpareBedroom 25-10-2006 02:37 PM

saving tulip and daffodil bulbs over winter
 
wrote in message
ups.com...
Here in Central New York (Zone 5), it is pretty much too late to plant
tulip and daffodil bulbs. I received them late and it's been raining
almost nonstop, with temperatures from the low 40s to mid50s. Is it
safe to plant these bulbs, or should they be preserved until spring?
If I have to preserve them over winter, how do I do that?


I planted some last year in Rochester, in mid-November. They all did fine.
Keep your eye on the weather forecasts and have the trowel ready. Have the
shotgun ready for the deer, who will eat your tulips in the spring.



John McGaw 25-10-2006 04:58 PM

saving tulip and daffodil bulbs over winter
 
wrote:
Here in Central New York (Zone 5), it is pretty much too late to plant
tulip and daffodil bulbs. I received them late and it's been raining
almost nonstop, with temperatures from the low 40s to mid50s. Is it
safe to plant these bulbs, or should they be preserved until spring?
If I have to preserve them over winter, how do I do that?


I routinely planted very late in Anchorage, Alaska when I lived there,
sometimes having to break through a thin layer of frozen soil to do it.
This was not by choice -- some supplier were just slow. As long as the
bed is prepared well and has decent drainage (most bulbs dislike
permanently sodden soil) you should have no problems.

--
John McGaw
[Knoxville, TN, USA]
http://johnmcgaw.com

jab 25-10-2006 06:40 PM

saving tulip and daffodil bulbs over winter
 
wrote:

Here in Central New York (Zone 5), it is pretty much too late to plant
tulip and daffodil bulbs. I received them late and it's been raining
almost nonstop, with temperatures from the low 40s to mid50s. Is it
safe to plant these bulbs, or should they be preserved until spring?
If I have to preserve them over winter, how do I do that?

Plant them now as long as the ground is not frozen. They will not keep
very well otherwise. I know from finding forgotten bulbs in the spring.
JAB

Kay Lancaster 25-10-2006 10:42 PM

saving tulip and daffodil bulbs over winter
 
On 25 Oct 2006 01:45:12 -0700, wrote:
Here in Central New York (Zone 5), it is pretty much too late to plant
tulip and daffodil bulbs. I received them late and it's been raining
almost nonstop, with temperatures from the low 40s to mid50s. Is it
safe to plant these bulbs, or should they be preserved until spring?
If I have to preserve them over winter, how do I do that?


If you can get a shovel in the ground, it's fine to plant them now.
I doubt your soils are frozen yet.

Otherwise, you can pot the bulbs up and chill them for a couple of months,
then bring them to bloom indoors, a method called "forcing".
Search
http://groups.google.com for "bulb forcing faq" in the rec.gardens
group.

Unplanted storage will probably just lead to tbe bulbs respiring themselves
to death.

Kay, who's planted bulbs as late as mid December in the upper midwest. With
snow on the ground -- but the soil was still warm enough to dig.




Jan Flora 27-10-2006 10:37 PM

saving tulip and daffodil bulbs over winter
 
In article ,
John McGaw wrote:

wrote:
Here in Central New York (Zone 5), it is pretty much too late to plant
tulip and daffodil bulbs. I received them late and it's been raining
almost nonstop, with temperatures from the low 40s to mid50s. Is it
safe to plant these bulbs, or should they be preserved until spring?
If I have to preserve them over winter, how do I do that?


I routinely planted very late in Anchorage, Alaska when I lived there,
sometimes having to break through a thin layer of frozen soil to do it.
This was not by choice -- some supplier were just slow. As long as the
bed is prepared well and has decent drainage (most bulbs dislike
permanently sodden soil) you should have no problems.


Yep. I'm still planting bulbs here, a few hundred miles south of
Anchorage. We've got snow on the ground, but the ground isn't
frozen yet.

Jan

--
Bedouin proverb: If you have no troubles, buy a goat.

[email protected] 21-11-2006 10:53 AM

saving tulip and daffodil bulbs over winter
 
I don't know about the US but here in the UK you should plant tulip
bulbs later rather than earlier ( say late Oct early Nov) to avoid a
disease known as "Tulip Fire" which tends to attack tulip bulbs planted
at the same time as you plant Narcissus in late September.

Malcolm




Jan Flora wrote:

In article ,
John McGaw wrote:

wrote:
Here in Central New York (Zone 5), it is pretty much too late to plant
tulip and daffodil bulbs. I received them late and it's been raining
almost nonstop, with temperatures from the low 40s to mid50s. Is it
safe to plant these bulbs, or should they be preserved until spring?
If I have to preserve them over winter, how do I do that?


I routinely planted very late in Anchorage, Alaska when I lived there,
sometimes having to break through a thin layer of frozen soil to do it.
This was not by choice -- some supplier were just slow. As long as the
bed is prepared well and has decent drainage (most bulbs dislike
permanently sodden soil) you should have no problems.


Yep. I'm still planting bulbs here, a few hundred miles south of
Anchorage. We've got snow on the ground, but the ground isn't
frozen yet.

Jan

--
Bedouin proverb: If you have no troubles, buy a goat.



[email protected] 22-11-2006 04:59 PM

saving tulip and daffodil bulbs over winter
 

wrote:
Here in Central New York (Zone 5), it is pretty much too late to plant
tulip and daffodil bulbs. I received them late and it's been raining
almost nonstop, with temperatures from the low 40s to mid50s. Is it
safe to plant these bulbs, or should they be preserved until spring?
If I have to preserve them over winter, how do I do that?


What they said...
plus
If I have to preserve them over winter, how do I do that?

keep in mind 1)dry 2)dark 3)cold



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