Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
hardy tulips
I am looking for some hardy tulip bulbs. Can anyone recommend some from
personal experience? Thank you |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
hardy tulips
GH wrote:
I am looking for some hardy tulip bulbs. Can anyone recommend some from personal experience? Thank you Go for the species, every time. They're heart-lifting. IME you need to lighten heavy soil, but that's not difficult; and they want lots of sunlight. In wetter areas, especially on clay, having the bed slightly raised makes an enormous difference. Saxatilis, to name one, thrived and multiplied even in wet west Wales for me. Just buy the ones you like the look of. Even though they are species, you still get quite a lot of variation, so if you get interested in them it's always worthwhile buying bulbs of the same species from different suppliers. One nursery is Broadleigh: see http://www.broadleighbulbs.co.uk/misc/tuliporder.htm I didn't think I liked tulips much till I discovered the species. Go for it! (And come back here and brag insufferably if you get our native _T. sylvestris_ to flower reliably!) -- Mike. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
hardy tulips
"Mike Lyle" wrote in message ... GH wrote: I am looking for some hardy tulip bulbs. Can anyone recommend some from personal experience? Thank you Go for the species, every time. They're heart-lifting. IME you need to lighten heavy soil, but that's not difficult; and they want lots of sunlight. In wetter areas, especially on clay, having the bed slightly raised makes an enormous difference. Saxatilis, to name one, thrived and multiplied even in wet west Wales for me. Just buy the ones you like the look of. Even though they are species, you still get quite a lot of variation, so if you get interested in them it's always worthwhile buying bulbs of the same species from different suppliers. One nursery is Broadleigh: see http://www.broadleighbulbs.co.uk/misc/tuliporder.htm I didn't think I liked tulips much till I discovered the species. Go for it! (And come back here and brag insufferably if you get our native _T. sylvestris_ to flower reliably!) -- Mike. My advice would be go for the cheapest, they tend to bulk up the best and indeed I have several times tried to eradicate Appledorn Red from the fruit cage but it always comes back from bulblets I miss! -- Charlie, gardening in Cornwall. http://www.roselandhouse.co.uk Holders of National Plant Collection of Clematis viticella (cvs) |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
hardy tulips
I am looking for some hardy tulip bulbs. Can anyone recommend some
from personal experience? until recently I never realised that tulips were supposed to be un-hardy. In my last garden (heavy, sodden clay in Cheshire) I just planted a load of cheap "garden tulips" from B&Q (tall things in red and yellow). I never bothered about getting them too deep (was heavily pregnant when I planted them so struggled to bend) but did put a bit of sharp sand at the bottom of each hole. Five years on I'd say that half of them were still coming up and flowering each year. -- Hayley (gardening on well drained, alkaline clay in Somerset) |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
hardy tulips
The message
from "H Ryder" contains these words: I am looking for some hardy tulip bulbs. Can anyone recommend some from personal experience? until recently I never realised that tulips were supposed to be un-hardy. In my last garden (heavy, sodden clay in Cheshire) I just planted a load of cheap "garden tulips" from B&Q (tall things in red and yellow). I never bothered about getting them too deep (was heavily pregnant when I planted them so struggled to bend) but did put a bit of sharp sand at the bottom of each hole. Five years on I'd say that half of them were still coming up and flowering each year. You were lucky. Some hybrids are much more longlasting then others. Hardy, or unhardy, usually refers to cold resistance. It's not that they are un-hardy, but the hybrid varieties tend to gradually fade away over years as you've noticed ( its just a matter of how long it takes). AIUI they do it because the original bulb naturally reproduces by forming small bulblets after flowering, most of which don't get enough baking (in the UK) to ever reach flowering size. If you dig them up after the leaves fade and let them get baked by sun then replant, they do better, but most people don't bother. The species are better at reproducing flowering-size bulbs without being lifted, and also at self seeding . Janet |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
hardy tulips
From your experience with tulips do you know any that would not need
digging up before the frost and can be left dormant in the garden? My mother in law lives near Winchester. She is 75 and really loves tulips. I saw the gorgeous tulips on that nursery site and I wanted to send her some for Mother's Day. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Tulips ? What tulips ? | Gardening | |||
Digging up perfectly good tulips (was Moving tulips) | Gardening | |||
tulips question | Gardening | |||
Tulips | Gardening | |||
Tulips and Varmints | North Carolina |