It’s
time to plant tulips, hyacinths
By Norman Winter
MSU Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension Center
This
year was my first time to take part in the Black Friday Christmas
shopping chaos. From now on, I’ll just stay at home and plant
bulbs. I am not talking about daffodils, although I suppose if you
found a good buy you could certainly do that. What I am really talking
about are tulips and hyacinths purchased back in October.
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Top
- Yellow tulips provide a colorful contrast with purple
pansies.
Bottom
- Red tulips tower over other plantings in this garden
setting. |
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I
am from the old school that buys the bulbs in October and chills
them in the refrigerator until planting time in December. Be warned
that this too can be problematic. The story is legendary in a county
Extension office in Texas. A guy in Fort Worth wanted to surprise
his wife by cooking a pot roast for dinner. The real surprise came
when she realized that the weird onions placed around the roast were
actually her prized tulips from Holland.
Regardless
of whether or not you are a chiller, there is still a prerequisite
-- preparing the bed. What a waste to spend money on tulips, spend
time cooling them in the refrigerator and then shortchange the bed
in preparation efforts. Leave them in the refrigerator and prepare
that bed. Make it good and deep, organic-rich and well drained. Get
those weeds out.
Next,
take the bulbs out of the fridge. Daffodils, by the way, can still
be planted, too. While we like to scatter daffodils to look like
they are naturalized, we most often like tulips better if we treat
them like toy soldiers or arrange them in a more formal design.
Line them up like a marching band going down the football field.
In
recent years, I have seen the tulip interspersed with pansies and
violas, some even with Red Giant Mustard. This approach also works
very well. Don’t forget to plant them deep enough, about
two and a half times as deep as the bulb is wide.
While
very erect, the hyacinth looks too formal for the marching band
design, yet it is not informal enough to be scattered like the daffodil.
What does look good is to plant them in drifts and create a mass look.
Hyacinths need to be planted 3 to 5 inches deep.
To
me, there is not a better fragrance than that of the hyacinth. Sometimes
I feel similar to a cat that rolls in the catnip. A bed of blooming
hyacinths makes me want to “waller” in them.
You
can take this olfactory “sensorama” indoors by saving
some for forcing. There are actually little bulb vases made just for
hyacinths. Once you force some like this, you will forever be hooked.
You can force tulips, but I like to see these in small containers
or bowls mixed with other bulbs that will bloom in a two or three
week-long sequence.
We
can grow tulips as pretty as anywhere in the world. When they are
finished, simply dispose of them.
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Released:
December 1, 2005
Contact: Norman
Winter,
(601) 857-2284
Editor's
Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns
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