All posts by Gary Antosh

Methods For Flowering And Potting Bulbs

Bulbs to force in the greenhouse can be brought in now from the pit where they were buried if you planted “prepared” bulbs. Ordinary bulbs should be left for another two weeks or more so that they can build up a stronger root system. Put the bulbs into the dark for a week to compel them to make longer growth. Greenhouse owners create dark areas to put the plants in the darkness. This also helps hold the warmth that encourages faster growth.

Give hyacinths the light when three inches high and tulips when they are five inches. The first lot of narcissus can be treated in a similar manner, although later batches may be put on top of the bench in the light. Bring in a few pans at a time so that there will be a continuous succession of bloom. Forcing bulbs requires lots of water to build up good stems and a seeding of liquid food is a good idea. When they show their flower buds, finish them off in a cool house.

Lily-of-the-valley forces very nicely and takes about four weeks from time of planting. Do not attempt to force pips from your own yard. The results will be unsatisfactory. Buy the pips from a reliable store – the best pips come from Germany. The pips force in any kind of medium that will hold water, such as sphagnum moss, sand, vermiculite or soil. Plant with the top of the pips showing and place them under the bench to start them quickly. When there is five or six inches of growth bring them into the light. Water copiously.

Amaryllis bulbs are potted in December. Plant only one bulb in each pot. Five- or 6-inch pots are large enough. Pot firmly leaving one-half of the bulb exposed in three parts screened soil, two parts humus and one part cow manure. Established amaryllis should have the top inch or so of soil around the bulb scraped away and replaced with a good compost soil to which bone-meal has been added at the rate of a handful to each half dozen pots.

Easter Lillies can be planted this month. There are several types that flower well 100 days from planting in an 80-degree house. Pot them into 5-inch pots and place them under the bench until they make two or three inches of growth. Then they go on top of the bench in full light. Water sparingly until growth starts in earnest. Then water heavily.

 

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The Incas Golden Flower

For tall background plants we tried cleome Giant Pink Queen, an improved hybrid in a better color than the old-fashioned spider-flower. Graceful salmon pink flowers with long spidery stamens continue to open at the top of the 3. to 4-foot stalks.

Beneath the blooms seed pods form on long slim stems. Easy to grow and exotic in effect, cleome can be used to advantage in spectacular arrangements. Helen Campbell is a new pure white cleome introduced this year. Seed should be sown thinly outdoors when the soil has warmed up and seedlings thinned to stand 2 feet or more apart.

The Golden Flower of the Incas is the romantic name for Tithonia speciosa, a huge shrubby plant unlike any we had grown before. The name tithonia was given it in honor of a mythological character, Tithonus. The original habitat of this annual was Mexico and Central America, where it is also known as Mexican sunflower. Most of the garden varieties are hybrids and improvements on the species, with earlier bloom and a more reasonable height.

Richly colored and very easy to grow, tithonia frequently reseeds itself and comes up the following year. Torch tithonia, a promising novelty and one of the All-America selections of the best annuals for 1951, is certain to appeal because of its compact, bushy growth. It grows a little over 4 feet in height, with a spread of 2 feet. This novelty also blooms earlier than the older types, with flowers of a fiery scarlet.

Why not grow at least one novelty annual in your garden this year? The suspense of waiting to see the results is half the fun.

So what are you waiting for, unpack for yourself why so many people are interested about us and we will surely help you with your problem.

 

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