Tulips
are the gardener's pot of gold
Remember your
old "magic set" and the wonderfully colored brews you mixed? And the
surprises, and the fun?
Today you'll find there's greater magic
in tulips and even more gorgeous and beautiful colors packed away
in their sleek brown bulbs. To work this new magic, think of the happiest
flower colors and the prettiest combinations you ever yearned for
Tulips require a period of cold while they're
dormant and resting between shows. That means you must plant before
freezing weather, then get your great display in the spring weeks
of color if you know your tulips and plant early and late ones, and
a lot of middle-between.
Where do you want tulips in April? In May?
Decide that -and we can tell you what to plant. The ground should
be moist when tulips are planted. Give them two to four weeks to start
their roots before watering. Tulips should not have too much moisture
before they have made roots; in that condition they are easy victims
to rot or other infections.
Your big opportunity to surprise yourself,
your family, and your neighbors with the earliest tulips in the neighborhood
rests in those listed as species tulips.
Even in this group there are earlier- and
later-blooming kinds. So mind the E's, M's (midseason), and L's you
find in most of your bulb catalogs right after the variety names.
After the species tulips get well started at blooming, come the Single
Earlies and Double Earlies which are much better known. Then, in a
rush of colors both delicate and rich, come those classed as Darwin,
Lily-flowered, Cottage, Breeder, Late Double, and Parrot. These names
refer to flower forms as well as colors, and border lines between
the classes are often indefinite.
Settings are important. Where you
plant your tulips, and with what, is as important as which you plant
and the quality of the bulbs, When you are advised to buy "top size"
bulbs the term may seem vague and to need clarification. Tulip bulbs
are graded according to circumference. The largest four of about eight
sizes are offered for sale to dealers. Allowances are made, of course,
for varieties which are normally small.
The biggest bulbs naturally produce the
largest flowers. You will find over several years of experience with
tulips that it is smartest to invest a few cents more and buy top
size bulbs, This large, vitality-filled stock will give larger blooms
three or four years in succession.
A good succession of gay tulip varieties
and colors six weeks or more-runs like this:
Species tulips. These may be put
to manifold uses since they'll thrive in soil less well supplied with
nutrition than the soil required for Darwin and Breeder tulips. Too,
they rather like a baking during the summer. They are ideal for planting
around or among rocks or along a stone-edged path. Keep in mind when
selecting a location the height of the kind you are planting, as they
vary. Some are as low as 6 inches and some as tall as 15. Your catalog
may list them as D for dwarf, M for medium, and T for tall. Don't overcrowd
them when planting; a spacing of 4 inches is none too much. The Waterlily
tulips, Tulipa kaufmanniana, are dwarfs, but the earliest of
all to flower. They look both fit and pert snuggled in the lee of
a rocky outcrop or close to low junipers or pines. The basic color
is like good Jersey cream, but the outer petals are striped and splashed
with red. The blooms open flat in the noonday sun to the great delight
of winter-weary bees. Bright blue Siberian scillas make fine neighbors,
as do emerald mats of small Goldmoss, Sedum acre. Or plant
these bulbs where their flowers will raise their brief inches from
behind lilac-tinted moss phlox.
Fusilier, a selected variety of T. praestans,
a native of Bokhara, grows from 6 to 10 inches tall with several
pointed flowers to each stem. T. fosterlana Princeps and Red
Emperor are magnificently scarlet and truly huge. These blaze away
whether you plant them among rocks or close to a peony clump toward
the front of a mixed border.
Single Earlies. These are the tulips
most often used for formal beds. The variety Keiserskroon stretches
to 15 inches, is a bright red edged with clear yellow. Rising Sun-a
fine golden yellow, General De Wet-soft orange with a stippled effect,
and Pink Beauty-brilliant cherry-rose with white stripes, are some
of the best. Surround with forget-me-nots and pansies that complement
them-palest yellow pansies with De Wet, light blues with Pink Beauty
and carmine-red Prosperine.
Double Earlies. These look like
small peonies set down on short straight stems. Mr. Van der Hoef is
a bright clean yellow, Vuurbaak and Scarlet Cai nival excellent reds,
Electra, deep rosy violet. The reds and yellows make nice masses of
color below Garland spirea. Rosy pink Peach-blossom is never prettier
than when set below Pink Double flowering plum in a mass of blue violets.
Darwins. This class has tall stems-24
to 32 inches, and blocky cup-shape flowers. They bloom with lilacs,
Van Houtte spirea, and the intermediate iris.
Five outstanding Darwins are: Gloria Swanson-an
enormous crimson set off by a blue center, Scotch Lassie-a pure, deep
lavender that charms everyone when it's grown near a soft yellow variety-like
Niphetos-or below a Father Hugo's Rose. Zwanenburg is a pure white
of lasting substance. The Bishop is one of the finer dark purples,
excellent as contrast for pale pins and lavenders.
Cottage Tulips. Those in this class
are similar but usually have longer flowers than the Darwins. Advance
is the most spectacular and looks like a great flame-red poppy. Plant
it against a green background with forget-me-not-flowered anchusas
nearby. Rosabella--a delectable pink, Marjorie Bowen-salmon, buff,
and rose-pink, and Golden Harvest-deep lemon-yellow, are samples of
this class. English Daisies and blue bedding violas in front of them
guarantee they'll show off at their best.
Lily-flowered tulips. These rate
high on grace and are in demand for cutting. Captain Fryatt-reddish
violet, White Duchess-a truly all-white flower, and Yankee Girl-a
delightful buffy salmon, are three that draw extra praise. Like the
Darwins and Cottage tulips, those in the lily-flowered class look
the prettier if set among forget-me-nots or near mats of moss phlox
such as Vivid and Dixie Brilliant.
Breeders. Unusual art shades and
smoky overlays of hazy lavender and purples mark this group. They're
excellent cut flowers to arrange in brass and copper. Plant near purple
honesty, the golden daisylike doronicums, orange and yellow wallflowers,
or yellow and bronzy pansies. Purple-leaf Filbert and Copper Beech
make the handsomest of all backgrounds for them. Ask for Bacchus-violet
blue with a dusky bloom, Cherbourg-a golden terra cotta, and wood
brown Indian Chief.
Late Doubles. These have heads so
heavy they often need to be staked if rains are frequent. Eros-rosy
lavender, Mount Tacoma-a handsome white, and Uncle Tom-a blackish
red, are the boldest of the group. These are in full bloom when the
early iris start. Blue polemoniurn or pale blue bedding violas help
set off the big pompon blooms.
Parrots. These oddest of tulips
are growing in favor each spring, now that the newer varieties have
good stiff stems. With fringed edges and bold splashes of green on
their outer petals, they do look as though made of feathers. There's
a good color range and you can have Red Champion, Violet Queen, the
sparkling yellow Sunshine, vivid scarlet Therese, and the salmon-pink,
Fantasy. All make beautiful cut flowers and all look the lovelier
outdoors for having a groundcover about them of dwarf blue veronicas
and Spotted Pulmonaria.
Did you know that ......
- Tulips must be planted in the late fall or in early winter
- You can grow tulips under deciduous trees where it's too shady
for bloom later
- Plant food should be applied above the bulbs-but not where it
can touch them-and be well watered in
- Tulips do best in a loose, well-drained soil
- You can increase your plantings by lifting and dividing original
bulbs when out of bloom
- If you water them early when buds are ris. ing, you'll get larger
blooms, and taller stems?