Wicklow People

Practical Gardening

- ANDREW COLLYER’S

THE nurseries and garden centres up and down the country are now all well stocked with Spring flowering bulbs, those bulbous harbingers of spring which promise lengthenin­g spring days to come.

In fact bulbs have been in the garden centres since the end of August but this is really too early to even be considerin­g planting them in our Irish gardens which are still in their flowery summer pomp then. But with October’s dawn things are a little more ragged looking and the thought of pulling up bedding plants is much more agreeable and the thought of spring bulb planting much more realistic.

The main problem, or more of a nuisance really, with bulbs is that after they flower you have to leave the foliage intact to the bulb until it at least yellows before cutting back. This is to allow the bulb time to restore engery for next years flowering.

Luckily bulbs are ephemeral meaning they have a short life cycle but it can still be six to eight weeks after the flowers have gone before the foliage can be removed. With early flowering small bulbs like snowdrops, crocus and some early dwarf daffodils this is not too much of an issue because they leaf and therefore die off early but also because their foliage is small to and is therefore not overly conspicuou­s . Other larger later bulbs like big daffodils, tulips and bluebells have much bigger foliage that can persist well into June and become a frightful mess and block up planting areas you have earmarked for summer bedding.

There are a few ways to deal with this. Firstly you might consider growing bulbs in pots and containers that can be either left on patios or when in flower positioned in flower beds amongst other permanent plants. The beauty with both ways is that once the bulbs are past flowering the pots can be moved and placed somewhere less obtrusive and the foliage be left to wither in its own time. These bulbs can then either be lifted, stored and repotted the following October or left in the pots for next year. I wouldn’t recommend

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Colchicum autumnale

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