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Focus on Flowers
Show #33: Tulip Bulbs for Fall Planting
Tulips were growing in the gardens of Turkish Sultans in the early
1500s. The name is derived from the flowers resemblance to
upside down turbans known as tulibans. A flemish botanist took the
bulbs to the Netherlands and they became a status symbol in the
gardens of wealthy Dutch families. They became so expensive, and
the attempts to produce unusual varieties became so frantic, that
the economy was inflated by this tulipmania. As a result breeders
produced the many striped, feathered and marbled varieties that
are included in the genus tulipa today.
Bulbs are planted in the fall for spring bloom and they like cold
weather during winter and full or part sun when they flower. Tulips
are magnificent the first spring after they are planted, but many
are not reliably perennial in subsequent years. The shorter varieties
seem to come back more often than the tall Darwin or Triumph beauties.
Look for bulbs of the small species tulips - popular ones are Tulipa
Kaufmanní or water-lily tulips and Tulipa Gregii
which has mottled foliage. Use fertilizer that is not odiferous,
because it will advertise exactly where you have your planted bulbs,
and rodents will dig them up. It is also a sad fact, but deer find
tulips delectable.
This is Moya Andrews and today we focused on tulips.
WFIU
Created and maintained by Michael
Toler
Last updated: Friday, September 3, 2004
Copyright 2004, The Trustees of
Indiana
University
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