Daffodil bloom from bulbs that were installed last autumn.

The elegant white callas that are just about to bloom in my garden have their origins in the ‘old country’. I obtained them from the garden of my great grandfather Tomeo in my ancestral homeland; Sunnyvale, near San Jose. I am told that my great grandfather planted them decades ago, and had been trying to get rid of them almost as long. I suppose that means that these callas are easy to grow.

My belladonna lilies that got planted two autumns ago are about as old, since they came from the garden of my mother’s mother in Santa Clara, right near Sunnyvale, and were in her mother’s garden prior to that. These bulbs just keep on growing, blooming and multiplying. Although I do not like their bright pink color much, I can not argue with their reliability.  

Bulbs and bulb like plants that can take care of themselves and thrive with minimal or no attention are always welcome in my garden. Bright orange crocosmia is perhaps just as reliable, or should I say ‘persistent’, as callas are, and like callas, should be planted about now. Yellow, red, and orange with red flowering varieties are also available. Pink, red, orange, yellow and salmon cannas are in season too. They are easier to contain, but are likewise prolific.

Some of my other favorites that get planted about now for summer bloom want more attention, but are certainly worth it. Dahlias can naturalize if conditions are right for them, but will more likely do better if dug, divided and replanted in enriched soil at least every few winters. They are remarkably easy to propagate. Asiatic lilies likewise prefer to be dug and replanted as their soil becomes depleted, but are not likely to regenerate year after year if ignored.             

Honestly though, some of the other summer blooming bulbs and bulb like plants that get planted about now are rather risky. I like to grow gladiolus because they happen to be among my favorite flowers. However, unless they get well amended soil and fertilizer, they do not perform very well, if at all, after their first year. Liatris is not much more reliable. Tuberous begonia is still a mystery to me, since I have not been able to prevent them from rotting in their first year!

Of the many bulbs and bulb like plants that get planted in autumn that are now blooming, grape hyacinth, snowdrop, watsonia, bearded iris, daffodil and narcissus are the most reliable and likely to naturalize, particularly with rich soil and regular watering. Daffodil and narcissus do not spread as well as the others, but are probably the most resilient. With a bit more effort, freesia and crocus can be persistent. In some situations, freesias have actually been known to naturalize as effectively as grape hyacinth.

Other early bloomers (that get planted in autumn) are more demanding. The anemones that I planted in about 1990 survived neglected in my garden for nearly a decade, but probably produced more flowers in their first year than in all subsequent years combined. Ranunculus and hyacinth may do the same if conditions are not just right for them. Tulips are perhaps the most profusely colorful of spring bulbs, but are sadly grown mostly as annuals, since they rarely do much more than produce foliage after their first year.

8 thoughts on “Flowering bulbs brighten the garden better than incandescent bulbs.

  1. Great post Tony! I love the personal slant – your own ‘heritage’ bulbs! I know our climates are very dissimilar – and probably our soils too – but I find that certain tulips do actually persist.

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    1. This is a very old article. I have not discussed my own gardening in several years. One of the editors requested that I not do so, but I can not remember which editor it was, or if I even write for that editor anymore.

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      1. Well … this reader enjoyed it. I remember years ago when gardening journalism was my job in Britain, being rung up late at night by a boss (who was also a ‘kind-of’ friend) to be ripped to pieces for starting a garden-visit article with comments about the way policemen gravitated to showing sweet peas (every trade in England appears to have their favourite plants to show). That was in the 1990s. Now personalising gardening is the vogue in the UK – the more ‘people-focused’ the better.

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      2. Back in the late 1990s, I wrote some rather offensive commentary that, surprisingly, no one seemed to be offended by. I do not believe that it was because no one was reading the garden column back then. I mentioned that fish emulsion is made from byproducts and waste from processing fish products that are too good for fine French perfume. Strangely, the topic that seems to be most offensive is pollarding. If I mention that American arborists no longer learn how to do it properly because it is so vilified here, English arborists write nasty letters to me about how they still do it, and demand that I write another article to retract all that I said about it and apologize to them . . . in England. English arborists should not read the newspaper in Beverly Hills. Anyway, some readers want to read more personalized content, so I may resume writing such content in the future.

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      3. Oh, I suppose I should not snivel about it so much. However, in the future, I might write about that article about the redwoods within the context of my Horridculture theme for Wednesday.

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