Planting and Caring for Flower Bulbs
by Michael J. McGroarty
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There is nothing quite as welcome as those beautiful spring
flowers that seem to emerge from nowhere to welcome the arrival
of spring. Bulb type flowers are really unique plants, because
they spend most of their days resting quietly beneath the
surface of the soil. Then right on schedule, up they come, full
of bloom and vigor, and then almost as fast as they came, they
go. Except for the green leafy part of the plant that tends to
linger longer than we would like them to.
Despite their short bloom time and unattractive foliage after
the blooms are gone, they are still a wonderful addition to any
landscape. But how should you care for them? First let’s talk
about how to use them in your landscape. Flowers of all kinds
are best when planted in groupings. Many people buy 25 or 50
bulbs and just go around the yard planting helter skelter.
That’s fine if that’s what you want, but when planted that
way they tend to blend in with the landscape and really don’t
show up well at all. When you plant them in large groups they
are a breathtaking showpiece.
In the early spring start thinking about where you would like
to create a bed for flower bulbs. Prepare the bed by raising it
with good rich topsoil, and if at all possible add some well
composted cow manure. Do this in the spring while you are in the
gardening mood, you may not be in the fall. Over the summer fill
the bed with annual flowers to keep the weeds down, and to
pretty up your yard for the summer. Come fall all you have to do
is pull out the annuals and plant your bulbs to the depth
recommended on the package.
If you think you could have a problem with squirrels digging
up the bulbs and eating them, you can also wrap the bulbs in
steel wool, leaving just the tip of the bulb exposed so it can
grow out of the little wire cage you’ve created. Or you can
just plant the bulbs and then cover the bed with chicken wire or
plastic fencing until the bulbs start to grow in the spring.
When the bulbs come up in the spring and start blooming, you
should clip off the blooms as they start to wither. This keeps
the bulb from producing seeds, which requires a lot of energy,
and you want the bulb to use all of its available energy to
store food in preparation of the bulb’s resting period. Once
the bulbs are completely done blooming you don’t want to cut
off the tops until they are withered and die back. The million
dollar question is how to treat the tops until that happens.
Many people bend them over and slip a rubber band over them,
or in the case of bulbs like Daffodils tie them with one of the
long leaves. This seems to work because it is a very common
practice among many experienced gardeners. However, Mike is
about to rain on the parade.
I strongly disagree with this theory because back about 6th
grade we learned about photosynthesis in science class. To recap
what we learned, and without going into the boring details,
photosynthesis is the process of the plant using the sun’s
rays to make food for itself. The rays from the sun are absorbed
by the foliage and the food making process begins. In the case
of a flower bulb this food is transported to the bulb beneath
the ground and stored for later use.
So basically the leaves of the plant are like little solar
panels. Their job is to absorb the rays from the sun to begin
the process known as photosynthesis. If we fold them over and
handcuff them with their hands behind their back, they are not
going to be able to do their job. It’s like throwing a
tarpaulin over 80% of a solar panel.
In order for the leaves to absorb the rays from the sun, the
surface of the foliage has to be exposed to the sun. On top of
that, when you bend the foliage over, you are restricting the
flow of nutrients to the bulb. The veins in the leaves and the
stem are a lot like our blood vessels. If you restrict them the
flow stops.
You decide. I’ve presented my case. Bending them over seems
to work, but I’ve spent a lot of money on my bulbs. I want
them running at full speed. What I do is clip the blooms off
once they are spent, and just leave the tops alone until they
are yellow and wilted. If they are still not wilted when it’s
time to plant my annual flowers, I just plant the annuals in
between the bulbs. As the bulbs die back the annuals tend to
grow and conceal them. If one shows through I clip it off. It
seems to work well for me.
Michael J.
McGroarty is the author of this article. Visit
his most interesting website, http://www.freeplants.com
and sign up for his excellent gardening newsletter.
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