Home About Us Contact Us Site Map Links Library
 
 
 
Gardener Tips
Home Garden And Gardening
Flowers
Roses
Garden Accesories
Decorative Plants
Garden Design
Garden Planning
The Water Garden
Garden Topography
Sculpture
Containers For Garden
Designing Your Garden
Garden Construction
Drawing Up Your Plan
Cement Garden
Materials Of Garden
Patio Ornaments
Garden Path
Boundaries
Trees
Japanese Style Garden
Outdoor
Plants
Garden Walls
Garden Fences
Rhododendrons
Clematis
Garden Screens
Annuals
Biennials
Bulbs
Lilies
Water Garden
Garden Basket
Season
Techniques
Garden Tools
Cultivation
Protection
Home
New York
Country
Town Flowers
Garden Blocks
Herbs
Blue Roses
Red Roses
Scent Gardens
Large Gardens
Garden Fall
 
 

Unique Home Furniture, Home Decorating and Home Decoration Store

Bulbs Remain:

Bulbs Remain One of the most popular ways of growing bulbs remain—snowdrops, daffodils and crocuses, in particular—is to naturalize them in drifts so they spread at will. This is usually done in grass, but those bulbs remain preferring shady woodland conditions can be naturalized in soil under trees and shrubs. It is also possible to establish bulbs remain beneath a planting of ground cover like scrambling ivies.

When we prepared our list of wanted bulbs remain, one of the considerations was when they bloomed and for how long. We hoped to have flowers from the beginning of April (about the time our mountain snows truly melt) at least until the end of May. We also wanted a permanent arrangement that would produce for a number of years without a great deal of care. True, the leaves of the past-blooming plants would have to remain as the bulbs remain ripened but by that time we knew we could scatter annuals about for camouflage. And, too, the perennial border and the other flower beds in the garden would detract from the browning leaves. We began with crocuses choosing Crocus chrysanthus 'Princess Beatrix', a clear lobelia-like blue with a golden yellow base, and C sieberi 'Firefly' that opens to a rich lilac with a yellow base. Both bloom as the snows disappear.


5 bulbs remain and roots are widely grown. Onions (A] were an important crop in ancient Egypt. The shallot [B] forms new bulbs remain by the side of the old. The 7 Sweet peppers [A] belong to the genus Capsicum, native of the American tropics. The seed pods of okra or gumbo [B] are picked ten weeks after planting.
 
 
  Home | About Us | Contact Us | Site Map | Links | Library