Times Colonist

Quality, timing ensure best bulbs

Buy wisely, plant at the right time for the best flower results

- DEAN FOSDICK

Flower bulbs delivered by growers are nearly always disease-free, thanks to rigorous industry-imposed inspection­s at home and abroad.

But consumers play the most important role in quality control: They must buy the best bulbs they can find and then keep them that way.

“It doesn’t matter what you’re buying, a car or a piece of equipment: The better you take care of it and the more you know about it, the better the results,” said Leo Roozen, owner of Washington Bulb Co. Inc. in Mount Vernon, Washington.

“That’s especially true for something you’re growing, like a bulb.”

Shop around before you buy. It’s one thing to purchase bulbs at the right price. It’s quite another to find the best spring-blooming bulbs at the right time of year.

“You need to plant bulbs in cool ground — 13 degrees or lower,” said Tim Schipper, founder and owner of Colorblend­s, a wholesale bulb company in Bridgeport, Connecticu­t.

“But many retailers want bulbs on their shelves by Labour Day,” he said. “They want that because they only have eight weeks before Halloween and Christmas, and must thin their inventorie­s before the holiday sales season.”

Garden centres are usually more flexible and smarter about when to plant, but competitio­n forces many of them to offer their bulbs early too, Schipper said.

If you do buy bulbs in late summer or early autumn, then keep them cool, dry and well-ventilated while waiting for the best time to plant.

“Anywhere from 10 to 20 degrees is perfect,” Schipper said. “Tulips do well refrigerat­ed. Daffodils don’t need it.”

Additional guidelines for getting better results from fall-planted bulbs:

• Find retailers who display their bulbs in cool locations and who haven’t mishandled them by crushing or drying them out. That goes for Internet or mailorder shipments, as well. “Look for a clean, healthy, white fleshy bulb,” Schipper said. “It’s nice if they have some brown skin on them.”

• Plant bulbs in welldraine­d soil where they’ll get plenty of sun. “Don’t put them below the eaves of the house where snow will be falling all winter or by an eave spout where the soil is too wet,” Roozen said. “Also, avoid hillsides where the topsoil is thin. All these things play a factor regarding when or even if they’ll bloom.”

• Don’t put bulbs in the ground until the soil cools to 13 degrees. Try to plant them at least four to six weeks before the first hard freeze so their roots can develop.

• Plant bulbs with the pointed side up, and place them three times the height of the bulb deep. Add water and fertilizer.

• Keep the plants dry after they go dormant in the spring. If you want them to come back the next growing season, don’t braid or cut them until the foliage turns completely yellow or brown, Schipper said.

“People have to get used to a bit of a messy look with daffodil foliage,” he said.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tulips grow in commercial bulb fields near Amsterdam, in the Netherland­s. Get better results in the spring by planting your bulbs properly in the fall, in cool ground. Tulip bulbs should planted in well-drained soil.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tulips grow in commercial bulb fields near Amsterdam, in the Netherland­s. Get better results in the spring by planting your bulbs properly in the fall, in cool ground. Tulip bulbs should planted in well-drained soil.

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