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Planting Tulipas
4 Answers
hi guys. I've brought some fully grown tulipa's that came five steams to a plant pot. My question is, do i have to keep them all together in the soil they came in when i plant them, or can i carefully split them up? Many thanks and happy summer :-)
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No best answer has yet been selected by khaleesi. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Read the 'lift and dry' section here and combine that with the information under 'Division':
https:/ /www.rh s.org.u k/advic e/profi le?pid= 684
i.e. (as I read it) you need to lift the bulbs (preferably after flowering), separating them out. Then dry them out over the summer and replant them individually in the autumn.
(Disclaimer: I'm the world's worst gardener. I'm simply trying to make sense of what the Royal Horticultural Society advises!)
https:/
i.e. (as I read it) you need to lift the bulbs (preferably after flowering), separating them out. Then dry them out over the summer and replant them individually in the autumn.
(Disclaimer: I'm the world's worst gardener. I'm simply trying to make sense of what the Royal Horticultural Society advises!)
If you have got a well drained sunny spot for them then you can plant them out directly and can separate them if you wish al though if you’ve only got five I would leave them together as they don’t look nearly so good in ones and twos. If they are the big showy kind then I find they won’t do much anyway and are likely to just put up leaves for a few years before you get a flower again. The smaller species kind will flower annually on the right conditions.
Chris, i'm definitely in the same boat as you. I brought a pack of seeds thinking I could just plant them and they would grow with a little bit of water and sun, but that just isn't the case. Thank you for your advice, I have kept them all together and they've added some much needed colour to my front garden which consists mainly of greenery
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