There’s nothing like the sight of colorful tulips popping up out of the ground — a sign that spring has sprung and sunny days are ahead! If you’ve transplanted potted tulip plants this spring or are ...
Tulips quickly sprout from the ground and show off vividly colored blooms while most other plants have barely started waking up in spring. But what should you do with tulip bulbs after flowering and ...
Are your tulips making an early appearance this year due to our mild winter? So are the colorful cupped and star-shaped flowers blanketing 40 acres at the Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm in Woodburn. "What a ...
Spring is here and tulips are in full bloom. See what you need to know about how to care for tulips and what to do when the sculptural flowers reach their peak bloom. Spring is here and tulips are in ...
M.B.: Snip off the stem and any faded flower head left on your tulips, then "water" the remaining leaves with liquid plant food. Late May and June is the time when tulips are storing energy and making ...
Tulips are grown from bulbs that are separated from a mother plant. As the bulb matures, it stores carbohydrates to produce foliage and blooms. Most growers purchase mature bulbs to be planted in late ...
The tulip can be one of the most spectacular flowers in our spring garden. Or, it may bloom beautifully for a year or so, then dwindle into zilch. Blame it on the unfortunate reproductive life of some ...
All of October and into early November is the ideal time to plant spring bulbs (tulips, daffodils, hyacinths, etc.) in central Pennsylvania. This timing allows the new bulbs to put down roots while ...
Can you still plant tulip bulbs up to Christmas? The short answer is yes, which is good news for anyone who has been getting dirty looks from that bag of bulbs still sitting unopened in the shed.Yes, ...
DEAR JESSICA: About 10 years ago I planted over 100 tulip bulbs on the property around my house. They were beautiful until I made the mistake of pulling out the dying flowers as they began to droop.
Did you know that in 17th century Holland, you could buy a house or a farm field for a handful of tulip bulbs? Not because property was dirt cheap, but because tulips were that valuable. The Dutch ...