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Giant Flowering Onion - Allium
giganteum
Family: Amaryllidaceae (Amaryllis) Zone 5
How to Plant: bulb; plant 6 to 8 inches deep and one foot apart
in the fall
Habit: upright in foliage and flower
Foliage: bluish gray; strap-shaped; 18 inches long; 2 to 4 inches
wide
Flower: pinkish purple; borne in dense globe-shaped cluster 4
to 6 inches across; flower stalk 3 to 4 feet tall; late spring to early
summer
Culture: ordinary soil; full sun or partial shade; dramatic in
flower - plant in clusters of 5 to 7 bulbs; usually planted in back of
the perennial border; long-lasting as cut flower |
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Grecian Windflower, Green Anemone
- Anemone blanda
Family: Ranunculaceae (Buttercup) Zone 6
How to Plant: tuberous root; plant 2 to 3 inches deep and 3 to
4 inches apart
Habit: mounded; less than 6 inches
Foliage: 1 or 2 dark green basal leaves; divided; dies down by
midsummer
Flower: no true petals - has petal-like sepals; daisy-like flowers
1-1/2 to 2 inches wide; white, pinkish, blue and white; early spring
Culture: humus-rich, loamy soil; tolerated high pH; partial shade
and protection from wind prolongs flowering |
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Glory-of-the-Snow - Chionodoxa
luciliae
Family: Liliaceae (Lily) Zone 4
How to Plant: bulb; plant 3 inches deep and 3 inches apart in
fall
Habit: upright; 3 to 6 inches
Foliage: grasslike; dark green; 2 leaves per stem
Flower: blue with white center; about 5 in a cluster; each flower
1 inch across; star-like flowers borne on a reddish stalk that extends
above foliage; early spring
Culture: ordinary, well-drained soil; suitable for under-planting
deciduous shrubs; plant in masses for immediate effect; will multiply
slowly by self seeding |
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Crocus - Crocus species
Family: Iridaceae (Iris) Zone 4
How to Plant: corm; plant 3 inches deep and 4 inches apart in
fall
Habit: upright; 6 inches
Foliage: grasslike; dark green; curved; silver striped down center
of leaf; leaves shorter than flowers, then expand to 8 to 12 inches after
flowering
Flower: 1 1 /2 to 8 inches long; white, yellow, purple or striped;
usually borne singly; close at night or on cloudy days; spring
Culture: plant in well-drained soil; full sun or partial shade;
may be naturalized in lawns if foliage is allowed to ripen properly
Note: There are 3 main groups of crocus: C. chrysanthus (Golden
Crocus) flowers very early and has small flowers; C. vernus (Dutch
Crocus) is most popular and has larger flowers (many named cultivars of
crocus are in this group); the third group is comprised of botanic species,
that tend to have small, brightly colored flowers. There are Crocus
species that flower in autumn. |
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Winter
Aconite - Eranthis hyemalis
Family: Ranunculaceae (Buttercup) Zone 4
How to Plant: tuber; plant 3 inches deep and 4 to 6 inches apart
in early fall; soak tubers overnight before planting
Habit: upright; 3 to 8 inches
Foliage: basal; long petioles; deeply divided; leafy bract situated
immediately under flower; actual foliage develops as flowering ends; dies
down in summer
Flower: solitary; one inch across; yellow petallike sepals; very
early spring
Culture: partial shade to full sun; well-drained, moist soil;
plant in masses; good for naturalizing; will self-sow |
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Checkered
Lily, Guinea-Hen Flower - Fritillaria meleagris
Family: Liliaceae (Lily) Zone 4
How to Plant: bulb; plant 4 to 6 inches deep and 4 to 6 inches
apart in early fall
Habit: erect; 9 to 15 inches
Foliage: few, alternate leaves; linear; 3 to 6 inches long
Flower: drooping; usually solitary; white or mottled and veined
with bronze, gray, purple and white; 1-1/2 inches long; spring
Culture: full sun or light shade; moist, well-drained soil; propagate
by dividing after foliage ripens
Note: Arelated species, F. imperialis (Crown Imperial),
bears several pendant flowers atop a 2 to 4 foot stalk with a tuft of
leaves at the top of the stalk; flowers are bright yellow or orange. |
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Common
Snowdrop - Galanthus nivalis
Family: Amaryllidaceae (Amaryllis) Zone 4
How to Plant: bulb; plant 3 inches deep and 3 inches apart in
fall
Habit: upright; 6 to 8 inches
Foliage: 2 to 3 leaves; 1/4 inch wide; 6 inches long
Flower: white except for green crescent around the notch of inner
floral segments; external floral segments longer than inner ones; flower
drooping; 1/2 inch across; borne on slender stalk; very early spring;
cultivars may have more green in flowers or be doubled
Culture: partial to full shade; moist, well-drained soil with
high organic matter; naturalize in large drifts; propagate by dividing
clumps immediately after flowering |
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Common
Hyacinth - Hyacinthus orientalis
Family: Liliaceae (Lily) Zone 5
How to Plant: bulb; plant 7 inches deep and 6 to 9 inches apart
in fall
Habit: upright; 12 inches
Foliage: 4 to 6 basal leaves; strap-shaped; margins upturned;
1 inch wide and up to 12 inches long
Flower: many flowers in showy, crowded, terminal raceme; individual
flowers about 1 inch across; very fragrant; yellow, rose, pink, blue,
salmon and white; mid-spring
Culture: full sun; good drainage; fertile soil amended with organic
matter and sand; remove spent flower stalks; floral display gradually
decreases each year - dig and discard bulbs as necessary; flowers too
rigid for naturalizing; many named cultivars available |
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Dutch Hybrid Iris - Iris
hybrids
Family: Iridaceae (Iris) Zone 6
How to Plant: bulb; plant 5 inches deep and 4 to 6 inches apart
in the fall
Habit: upright; 1-1/2 to 2 feet
Foliage: leaves almost cylindrical; up to 2 feet long; tips of
leaves may tend to die back
Flower: 1 or 2 flowers; 3 to 4 inches across; white, yellow, orange,
bronze, blue, purple or bicolor; late spring
Culture: full sun; well-drained soil; dry, warm soil in summer
is ideal; good for forcing indoors
Note: Dutch Hybrid Iris originated by crossing Spanish Iris (Iris
xiphium) with several other Iris species; Dutch Iris is a common cut
flower used by florists |
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Common
Grape Hyacinth - Muscari botryoides
Family: Liliaceae (Lily) Zone 4
How to Plant: bulb; plant 3 inches deep and 4 inches apart in
early fall
Habit: upright; 6 to 12 inches
Foliage: 6 to 8 basal leaves; up to 12 inches long and 1/3 inch
wide; dark green on lower surface; appear in autumn and remain green through
winter; dormant in summer
Flower: 12 to 20 flowers in terminal cluster on leafless flower
stem; each flower urn shaped and drooping; blue or white; 1/8 inch long;
early spring
Culture: fertile, sandy soil in full sun or partial shade; plant
in masses for best effect
Note: Arelated species, M. armeniacum, self seeds more
aggressively and is more invasive. |
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Daffodil, Narcissus, Jonquil -
Narcissus species
Family: Amaryllidaceae (Amaryllis) Zone varies
How to Plant: bulb; plant 6 inches deep and 6 to 12 inches apart
(smaller species bulbs require more shallow placement)
Habit: upright; 6 to 24 inches
Foliage: about 3/4 inch wide; up to 15 inches long; shiny green
Flower: one or several flowers to a stalk; 6 lower segments white
or yellow; trumpet long and tubular or short and cuplike, white, pink,
yellow, orange and orange-red; flowers single or double; extremely variable
- Narcissus are grouped into 12 named divisions; early spring to spring
Culture: well-drained soil enriched with organic matter; divide
every fourth year after leaves have died; easy to grow; remove faded flowers
so they dont set seeds
Note: The name daffodil applies primarily to flowers with large
trumpets and can be used for all members of the genus; the name jonquil
originally applied only to N. jonquilla, but now is usually applied
to all jonquilla daffodils of garden origin (Division 7); the name narcissus
is derived from the genus name Narcissus. |
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Siberian Squill - Scilla siberica
Family: Liliaceae (Lily) Zone 4
How to Plant: bulb; plant 3 inches deep and 4 to 6 inches apart
in early fall
Habit: upright; 6 inches
Foliage: 2 to 5 grasslike, basal leaves; 6 inches long and 1/2
inch wide; blunt tipped and bright green
Flower: deep blue; bell shaped; 1/2 inch wide; in loose cluster
of 3 to 5; 1 to 6 flower stems per plant; early spring
Culture: fertile, sandy soil in sun or partial shade; useful under
deciduous shrubs and trees; plant in large masses for best effect; tend
to colonize over time; suitable for naturalizing in the lawn (foliage
matures quickly before turfgrass needs cutting) |
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Tulip - Tulipa species
Family: Liliaceae (Lily) Zone varies
How to Plant: bulb; plant 4 to 8 inches deep and 4 to 8 inches
apart in fall; deep planting (within reason) discourages bulbs multiplication
and encourages good-sized flowers for several years; species tulips usually
require shallower planting
Habit: upright or clumped; 6 to 30 inches
Foliage: usually basal; thick bluish green; untoothed; 6 to 10
inches long; Kaufmanniana and Greigii hybrids often have burgundy-or purple-mottled
leaves
Flower: usually solitary; erect; saucer-shaped; total of 6 petals
and sepals (except doubles); multitude of colors and flower forms (there
are over 400 named cultivars: common classes are Mendel, Fosteriana hybrids,
Kaufmanniana hybrids, Greigii hybrids, Triumph, Darwin hybrid, Lily-flowered,
Cottage, Rembrandt, Parrot, Double-flowered and Species tulips); early
spring to spring
Culture: well-drained, sandy, humus-rich soil in full sun or partial
shade; plant in masses; bulbs may be moved or discarded in midsummer after
foliage has withered; some gardeners plant new bulbs each year; remove
faded flowers to avoid seed set
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