Flowers for Landscaping: Daffodils

Daffodils


Flowers for landscaping: Daffodils

Every spring, in every town and every garden, bright yellow daffodil trumpets cheerfully announce that spring has sprung. Their appearance might seem to be as inevitable as lengthening days and April showers but actually daffodils will stop flowering faster than you can say "fluttering and dancing in the breeze" if you don't treat them right. Mess with daffodils too soon after they've flowered, for example, and the year after they'll produce nothing but masses of dull green foliage.

The dull green foliage is in fact the powerhouse of the daffodil and the source of its luminous yellow flowers. Never cut it back or move daffodils too soon. If you do, you will deprive the plants of the nourishment they need to flower next year. Wait at least six weeks before removing the fading leaves. Fading flowers, on the other hand, should be removed immediately so that all the plant's energy is spent replenishing the bulb for next year's display. The yellowing leaves left behind can look untidy so hide them among other later flowering bulbs.

Another sure way to starve daffodils of the nutrients they need to flower is to plant them too shallow. In borders, plant them at a depth of three times their height, and in grass slightly deeper. Similarly, crowded daffodils are hungry daffodils and hungry daffodils won't flower. If necessary, divide clumps in late summer and replant them. That way, after several years a few sparse daffodils will become a golden drift of flowers, without your having to buy hundreds of bulbs.

Late planting is another path to flowerless daffodils: they'll need a least a season to recover their strength. Daffodils should be planted between August and November. Lastly, watch out for signs of parasites. For example, the larvae of the narcissus bulb fly will eat their way through the flowers before they've even gotten off the ground. A good first step to disease-free plants is to buy bulbs that are firm and healthy. Then plant them as quickly as possible. 

Choose varieties that suit your purpose. For borders and cut flowers, cultivars with big bold flowers, borne one to a stem work well. They include the popular 'King Alfred', which has deep yellow flowers and grows to 17 inches and the award-winning 'Tahiti', which has striking orange and bright red central petals. New cultivars are being bred all the time, so keep your eye out at your garden center or nursery. A daffodil breeder's wish list includes sun-resistant color, strong stems, round petals and leaves that don't obscure the flowers. Plants with these qualities are rewarded by horticulture and daffodil societies and they will give an excellent display. Award-winners include 'Mount Hood', which has elegant ivory flowers that fade to purest white and 'Saint Keverne', which has golden yellow flowers. Most daffodil cultivars, which are crossbreeds of other daffodils, are easy to grow and tolerant of most soils and positions, although they usually prefer sunny or slightly shady well-drained soils.

For naturalizing in grass, species daffodils work well. They occur naturally in the wild and unlike hybrid daffodils will grow true from seed. For something different, try Hoop Petticoat Daffodils (Nacissus Bulbocodium 'Atlas'). Their delicate petticoat-shaped flowers and spiky glossy dark green leaves look magical in short grass. They like damp grass that dries out in summer. Plant them in drifts and plant bulbs deep enough: at twice their height and above one inch of good, acid, moist compost. Water moderately while the plants are growing but keep them almost dry while they're dormant. In the summer, harvest seeds and sow them in late summer or autumn to get even more flowers in a few years.

In pots, miniature daffodils, with their delicate flowers, work very well. For example, 'Jetfire', which has golden and tangerine flowers and the popular 'Jack Snipe', which has dark yellow flowers. To get the most prolific pot display, plant as many bulbs as possible at different depths. You can also mix daffodils with different flowering times to prolong the display. This is a good tip for border displays too. In fact, with one daffodil variety or another flowering from mid December to April, you could enjoy the uplifting spring glow of daffodil flowers during winter and summer too.

 

Be sure and check out my other articles on plants and flowers for landscaping

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