Amateur Gardening

Ask John Negus

John will reply personally to all your gardening questions every week…

What should I do with bulbs after flowering?

Q What do I do with spring bulbs after flowering? Should the potted ones be lifted and stored?

Clive Gurman, via email

A If those bulbs that you planted in a border can be left to ‘naturalise’ and you are not planning to replace them with other plants, so much the better. Indeed, they will multiply well if left in situ.

As for those in containers, I suggest that when they’ve finished flowering you move them to a bed or border to establish well.

Ideally, liquid-feed all plants at weekly intervals with a high-potash tomato fertiliser while leaves are green and perky and before they fade to brown.

Don’t cut off or knot the leaves as they are dying back as this will prevent them from returning goodness to the bulbs for the following year’s display.

If you need the pots, remove bulbs when the foliage has withered and died back, and store them in a cool, airy place before replanting them in autumn.

Plant them at two or three times their own depth in soil that drains well. Bulbs that are panted too shallow might grow leaves but fail to produce any flowers the following spring

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Amateur Gardening

Amateur Gardening1 min read
Amateur Gardening
Editor Kim Stoddart E-mail: Editor@amateurgardening.com Website: www.amateurgardening.com CEO Steve Wright Managing director Steve Kendall Group publisher Fiona Mercer Group web editor Rachel Harper Subscriptions marketing manager Claire Aspinall Ret
Amateur Gardening4 min read
What A Lot Of Water Knowledge
My motto ‘never say never’ might make it difficult to tell people my motto (jokes!) but it does come in handy for planting in the height of summer. When the July sun (we hope) beats down, the red soil in my garden resembles the hard, dry surface of M
Amateur Gardening5 min read
Growing Your Own Perennials
You can call me thrifty, frugal or penny-pinching over the way I try and grow everything from seed, but the truth is also that I do not embrace spending a fortune on plants imported from abroad to create a ‘quick fix’ garden. I simply can’t ignore th

Related