A Wave of Blue Bulbs for the Spring Garden

Although autumn is one of my favorite times of the year, it is also a very busy time with lots of tasks to complete.  One of my favorite goals to complete in the fall is the Planting of Bulbs.  In early to mid summer the surge of catalogues arrive and of course my intent is to order early to get the selection and more often than not I wait until September and even October to place my orders.

This year I was very excited about planting a new area with all Blue Bulbs.  I love blue and thought it would be fun to have an all blue garden of early flowering bulbs, backed by white flowering Jonquils.  The area is anchoring our horseshoe pit in the midst of our woodland garden.   Not used in the spring this becomes one of several paths creating journeys that wind throughout our garden.

There aren't a lot of really true-blue flowers but some of the blue flowering bulbs are exceptionally beautiful.  The varieites I selected grow well in most hardiness zones and I cant' wait  for their bloom in the spring.  I selected Chinodoxa Luciliae, Chionodosa forbesii 'Blue Giant', Brodiaea corrina, Ipheion uniflorum 'Rolf Fiedler', Ipheion uniflorum 'Wisley Blue', Chionodoxa sardensis, and Scilla siberica as my selections.

Chionodoxa sardensis, also known as the Turkish Glory-of-the-Snow. It is a superb heirloom species with a lovely gentian blue flower with a small white eye.  The flower height is 5" to 6" and flowers in April.  

                                            

Chionodoxa forbesii 'Blue Giant' is an improved and more vigorous form of Chionodoxa forbesii with larger flowers and a height of 4" to 8" and flowers in April.  It is vivid blue with large white centers.                         

               

Chionodoxa luciliae, known as Lucile's Glory-of-the-Snow was named in honour of Lucile, the wife of the Swiss botanist Pierre Edmond Boissier.   This little harbinger of spring has beautiful blue flat flowers that are like little stars with a white heart, can flower as early as February/March and is 4" to 6" tall.

               

Brodiaea corrina, also known as 'Fool's Onion' is a native to the Northwest U.S.  It is a star-shaped flower with blooms of deep violet and violet-purple tips and even darker midveins.  It has bell or funnel-shaped flowers and a grass-like foliage. The flower blooms a bit later in May to June when the Jonquils and Tulips come up and is a wonderful cut flower.  It can be a bit more tender hardy in zones 6-9 and is 14" tall.

               

Ipheion uniflorum Rolf Fiedler, or 'Spring Starflower'  is an old bulb, Circa 1836.  It is a sweetly-scented star-shaped periwinkle blue flower that blooms in April/May, 3" to 6" tall. 

                

Ipheion uniflorum Wiseley Blue, Spring Starflower, also circa 1936 is another sweetly-scented Starflower with star-shaped shimmering deep blue flowers that bloom in April/May.  This is one of the best cold hardy South American bulbs that requires very little care.  It multiplies to form a great low naturalizing patch and only grows 3" to 6".

             

Scilla siberica - Spring Beauty or Siberian squill has the lovliest nodding blue flowers.  This bulb will naturalize quickly.  It blooms very early in spring and grows 5" to 8" tall.  These bulbs are great selections for also growing in pots or forcing indoors for earlier bloom.

              

Early spring-blooming bulbs help to enliven the garden before the deciduous trees and shrubs leaf out in mid-spring.  They get plenty of sunshine through the bare tree limbs and are finished flowering and ready to go dormant by the time the trees flush out and send for their new spring growth.  

Before you can plant any of these bulbs bed preparation is important.  Digging into the soil with a trowel and loosening the soil by pulling it back and forth to create a area with holes slightly deeper than the desired planting depth is a must.  I mixed all the bulbs together and scattered them in the two areas each about 20 feet long.  I then planted the small bulbs about 3 inches deep and covered them with a mixture of the existing soil and composted soil with bulb food for extra nutrients.  The bed was then watered.

Once the bulbs have gone to rest the garden will be filled with different hostas, ferns and perennials that will add fabulous accents to the woodland garden.  The deciduous native shrubs of witch hazel, azaleas,   maples, and viburnums will now reveal the later spring and summer garden. 

I cannot wait until next spring when my new garden will give me days of delight - Only the flowers will be Blue.....

Votes: 0
E-mail me when people leave their comments –

You need to be a member of Landscape Juice Network to add comments!

Join Landscape Juice Network

Open forum activity

Fusion Media posted a blog post
The new Hunter MCC Controller has officially launched in the UK, introducing a powerful and scalable irrigation control solution designed for large-scale projects.Available from KAR UK, the MCC brings wireless, wide-area coverage and advanced flow…
15 hours ago
Mark McNee replied to Daniel Gillings @ DC inc's discussion Rumble strips in lawn!
"I think you would do better topdressing to gradually fill the hollows, I fear a roller won't achieve much and could course compaction. Rollers a generally best avoided on turf."
yesterday
Jonathan Davidson replied to Daniel Gillings @ DC inc's discussion Rumble strips in lawn!
"I have this in a large garden I work in, yet the other gardener does the lawns and hedges.
He has been mowing starting from the gravel drive up and down the lawn across to the river for 27+ years !! A four wheeler and there are definite ridges and…"
Sunday
Tom Greener replied to Daniel Gillings @ DC inc's discussion Rumble strips in lawn!
"Seen this before and we can only assume that it is the lawn having been mowed successively and frequently when the surface has been too soft causing mower wheels to produce ruts.  Our wet Autumns and Springs are the probably the culprit."
Sunday
Daniel Gillings @ DC inc replied to Daniel Gillings @ DC inc's discussion Rumble strips in lawn!
"This 'sounds' the most likely link to my 'issue' the furrows as so regular and a very repeated pattern. Perhaps a good heavy roller would aid...
the way my mower goes over it it bounces like crazy, and would therefore add to the issue. I'll take a…"
Sunday
John the gardener is now a member of Landscape Juice Network
Saturday
Will Roberts replied to Daniel Gillings @ DC inc's discussion Rumble strips in lawn!
"Could be as a result of the lawn having been airated by machine?"
Saturday
Mark McNee replied to Daniel Gillings @ DC inc's discussion Rumble strips in lawn!
"I can remeber been told about this problem when training 40 years ago. It's not uncommon and is the result of the same cylinder mower being used repeatedly for many years, generally in a narrow area where it has to be mowed in the same direction.…"
Saturday
Neil Darby replied to Taylor’s's discussion Selective lawn herbicides and composting clippings
"The first three cuts after spraying cannot go into compost. I do however send it to green waste (I didn't know that I can't & the amount within GW site would be nothing) You would have to be mowing every other day to clip off the seed heads to stop…"
Saturday
Neil Darby replied to Peter sellers's discussion Stiga/mountfield roller mower
"Hi Peter, I try not to mow if possible when its too wet. Like most machines the grass sticks everywhere. If it is already trimmed it is ok, just don't go cutting a couple of inches growth when wet! Just a side note, the bloody belt come off of it…"
Saturday
Adam Woods replied to Taylor’s's discussion Selective lawn herbicides and composting clippings
"How about a spray, then the next cut goes to waste?
Assuming the cuts are a few weeks apart all should be good?"
Friday
Maureen Luckett is now a member of Landscape Juice Network
Friday
John F replied to Daniel Gillings @ DC inc's discussion Rumble strips in lawn!
"Yes had this on an estate Victorian era , we could only guess that previously the area had been the kitchen garden and seeded over at some point ,the furrows looked like where they had earthed up potatoes in rows but possibly also rows of fruit…"
Thursday
Tim Wallach replied to Daniel Gillings @ DC inc's discussion Rumble strips in lawn!
"I've seen old daffodil fields with ridges and furrows.  The spaces between the ridges were double yours though to allow walking along to pick.  Could there have been commercial planting once upon a time?"
Thursday
Maximus! is now a member of Landscape Juice Network
Thursday
Daniel Gillings @ DC inc posted a discussion
Difficult one to describe. We've got a couple of lawns that we've taken over and both (unrelated locations) have got an almost rumble strip feel to certain sections. Absolutely paralell lines in a relatively large area. I'm ensured that the only…
Thursday
More…