Time to plant your bulbs!!
When we purchased our first house way out in Frenchtown, Maryland, a narrow strip of land squeezed between the waters of Tangier Sound and a picturesque marsh,the forlorn yard boasted nothing but wiregrass and one unruly fig bush. We moved down from NYC with no money and no jobs to a house with no heat, no insulation and years of neglect. You could not light a match in the kitchen where the floor sloped to a spongy center. Our kitchen demolition party took care of that, but then we didn’t have a kitchen. Our first lesson in renovation: don’t remove something until you have money and time to replace it.
It was frustrating being so strapped. I wanted to begin to beautify our derelict “dream-house.” Then the road sides burst into purple iris followed by tiger lillies- I began to travel with a shovel in my truck. Perhaps this is where my guerilla style of gardening began to evolve. Soon our yard was blazing with blooms, most all native perennials, some donated, traded and yes raided (from wild, non-peopled places and just a few, because they spread.) When we sold that house, I moved some of the bulbs with us, and then once more to where we live now, leaving behind us a trail of vigorous bulb gardens. My first action when we began to tackle our present house (another project, with no garden and years of contruction ahead) was to plant fruit trees surrounded at the base by my iris, lilly, daffodil, grape hyacinth and tulip bulbs to create a buffer for mowing.
. My favorite are the “black” very deep purple tulips. The waves of blooms take us from early spring to deep summer.
So…it’s bulb time!
When nighttime temperatures stay between 40-50°F. But, be sure to plant approximately six weeks before the ground freezes to allow sufficient time for rooting. Bulbs will root best in cool soil and once rooted undergo natural changes that keep them from freezing. Water your bulbs after planting to help them start the rooting process. After the ground cools or freezes, cover your bulb beds with a lightweight mulch (pine needles, buckwheat hulls, straw or chopped up leaves) 2-4 inches thick to help keep down weeds and maintain a consistently cool soil temperature.
…Various bulbs benefit
from different planting practices.
tulips
You can plant tulip bulbs with a tulip bulb planter. It is a round cylinder that you press into the ground, remove the dirt and place the bulbs in the ground, cover with remaining dirt and you’re done. Bulbs should be planted in late October/early November so that they can bloom in the spring. You can select a section of your lawn,
maybe rimming the driveway and plant tulips, daffodils (or any early spring bloom) in the lawn. They should finsh blooming before the lawn
gets too high, and then just mow ‘em down until next spring.
The kings of France selected the Bearded Iris
(Iris germanica) as their emblem, the fleur-de-lis.
Irises
grow from a root called a rhizome. You don’t need to plant the rhizomes very deep, in fact, the very top of the rhizome should be slightly above the surface of the ground. Plant them about 12 inches apart.The patch will get very crowded after several years, so you may wish to dig it up and gift these gems around to your friends. I have several patches to get to one day soon.
daffodils
Also can be planted outside of the garden. Generally bulbs should be planted so the bottom rests at a depth that’s two-and-a-half times the bulb’s diameter. In well-drained or sandy soil, plant an inch or two deeper to increase longevity and discourage rodents. Because bulbs look best planted in groups, you are better off using a garden spade instead of a bulb planter, which encourages you to plant bulbs singly. A spade makes it easier to set bulbs side by side in large groups. Plant groups of bulbs in holes no smaller than a dinner plate, or dig wide, curving trenches and position the bulbs in the bottom.
Jack Holland and Joan Gilsdorf of Salisbury have coaxed their early spring garden into an amazing festival of daffodils, they and their neighbors enjoy each year.
hyacinth
Layer different types of bulbs from bottom to top in the same hole to create companion plantings or a succession of bloom in a given location. For example, dig a 6-inch-deep hole and place several Dutch hyacinths in the bottom, lightly cover them with soil, then plant a handful of grape hyacinths at a 5-inch depth. The two types of hyacinths bloom at the same time in spring. The grape hyacinths create a softening skirt beneath the more massive Dutch hyacinths. As another benefit, the leaves of the grape hyacinth bulbs appear in autumn and remain all winter, providing a marker for the dormant Dutch hyacinth bulbs, so you won’t inadvertently plant on top of the hyacinths or dig them up.
garlic
Flowers are lovely, but garlic is golden! Purchase locally grown garlic bulbs (elephant garlic best) from the farmer’s market. Plant the small, individual cloves that break off from the bulb. Don’t break them up until you plant them. The outer cloves of each garlic will produce the largest bulbs. Like onions, garlic is great for wide-row growing. Plant the cloves the full depth of the bulb — three or four inches apart, and firm the soil. Try a row 10 to 12 inches wide. To grow big garlic bulbs, plant the cloves in late fall. They’ll mature the following summer.
Harvest garlic when the tops have only six to eight green leaves left. It should take at least 100 days for spring-planted garlic. Pull the heads up and let them dry for a few days, and then cure them in an airy place, like onions. Braiding is an excellent way to cure garlic. Store it in a cool place.
If you leave garlic bulbs in the ground over the winter, let them go to seed the following season. The top of the seed stalk will produce 10 to 15 tiny bulbs that you can plant for a future crop.
So we end as we begin again...
ON THE SUBJECT OF BULBS 
HOW TO BUY BULBS
Look them over just like you would fruit, bulbs should be firm, unblemished and large.
TIP
Plant soon after purchase or store in a cool dark place.
PLANT
Prepare a planting hole a few inches deeper than the recommended planting depth shown on the planting chart. Mix compost, well-rotted manure, or peat moss into the soil removed. Add a slow acting organic fertilizer to the bottom of the hole; then add enough soil to bring the hole to the proper planting depth. For a maximum effect, space bulbs only a few inches apart. Fill in the planting hole and water thoroughly.

NATURALIZING BULBS
One particularly successful type of naturalized planting is the woodland garden. Most spring bulbs will thrive in areas dominated by deciduous trees, since the trees allow plenty of light in the spring when the bulbs are in leaf.
SOMETHING TO LOOK
FORWARD TO..…………………….but for now, lets force the issue
INDOOR WINTER BLOOMS
Now is also the time of the year to begin potting your favorite spring bulbs to prepare them for winter flowering. Tulips, narcissus (daffodils), hyacinths, crocus, scillas, grape hyacinths, and lily of the valley can be forced into flower in late winter and early spring. A pot of tulips on the window sill in February can make a winter-worn gardener renew the desire to survive the winter.
Begin by potting the bulbs in clean, sterile clay or plastic pots. Normally the “noses” of the bulbs are exposed. Do not bury the bulbs. The soil should be an open mixture of good garden loam (three parts), peat moss (two parts), and sand (one part). Don’t worry about soil fertility or feeding bulbs because they have enough stored food to flower one time. Keep the soil loose.
Plant the bulbs close together in the pot. Usually 6 tulip bulbs, 3 hyacinths, 6 daffodils, or 15 crocus, will fit into a 6-inch pot. The flat side of the tulip bulb should be placed next to the rim of the pot since the largest leaf will always emerge and grow on that side, producing a more desirable looking pot.
Allow 1/4-inch of space at the top of the pot so it can be watered easily. The bulbs should be watered immediately upon planting, and thereafter the soil should never be allowed to become dry.
Bulbs must be given a cold temperature treatment of 35– 48 degrees F for a minimum of 12 weeks. This cold treatment can be provided by placing in a cold frame,
an unheated attic or cellar. Near Christmas place the pots in a cool, sunny location
at a temperature of 50–60 degrees F for the first week or until the shoots and
leaves begin to expand. Then, they can be moved to warmer locations such
as the living room. Avoid direct sunlight.
BLOOM IN WATER
Hyacinths, crocus, and narcissus also can be forced in water. Special clear, glass vases are made for hyacinths or crocus. The bulb is placed in the upper portion, water in the lower portion. The vase is then kept in a cool, dark room (preferably under 50 degrees F) for four to eight weeks until the root system has developed and the top elongates. At this point it should be placed in a bright window, where the plant soon will blossom.
Bunch-flowering narcissus, such as Paper White and Soleil d’Or, can be grown in shallow pans of water filled with crushed rocks or pebbles.
FORCED WINTER BULBS make lovely gifts .
for some joyful color mid winter!