Sunday Express

A fantasia of flying colours

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cornuta, Myosotis, Erysimum and Heuchera.

Through summer, containers filled with annuals grown from seed in

Claus’s greenhouse­s are added to the displays. His technique involves planting just one variety in each pot allowing him to take pots out and replace them once the plants are done blooming. Repetition of colours through the displays is another primary principle of his way of container gardening.

Claus is generous with his knowledge and an easy communicat­or. He gives regular tours over Instagram live, produces informativ­e video tutorials and encourages legions of worldwide followers in an easygoing inclusive and open style.

Enjoy the pictures here, they’re the end results of some horticultu­ral, display and photograph­y skills. Take a moment to consider the design principles of the plantsman and work out for yourself how the magic has been achieved. A question I’m often asked is whether tulips will flower again next year and this topic can be a lively debate amongst gardeners!

In the wild, they’re perennial, often smaller varieties that grow on rocky soil. For example Tulipa acuminata has wonderful pointy red and yellow flowers and will naturalise in your garden.

Hybrid tulips which have been bred in Holland for colour and flower shape are best treated as annuals if you want to be sure of a good display. However, if you’re not too fussy (like me), dead head and leave them in the ground or containers, allowing the foliage to die back naturally as you do with daffodils so that the bulb can be replenishe­d. Some will return and some won’t. In my garden I get a smattering of repeats and at the moment some early single varieties are popping up such as ‘Purple Prince’ and the orange ‘Princess Irene’.

Alternativ­ely, if you want to reuse your pot once they have finished flowering, you can gently dig them up and let them dry out somewhere nice and warm, storing them for replanting next November.

You may notice small bulblets attached to the main bulb – these can be removed and separately potted up. Tulips can look messy when dying so if you have them in borders, it’s a good idea to plant them among some emerging perennials which will hide the untidy foliage.

Hybrids are annuals but you can just deadhead them so they repeat

 ?? Irene ?? FRESH ORANGE Princess
Irene FRESH ORANGE Princess
 ??  ?? STRIKING Tulipa acuminata
STRIKING Tulipa acuminata

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