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How to Grow Tulip Flowers like a Jeweled Crown

How to Grow, and Care for Tulip Flowers like a Jeweled Crown

A yard with a lot of Tulip Flowers blooming in it looks like a jeweled crown.

A yard with a lot of Tulip Flowers blooming in it looks like a jeweled crown. There are so many wonderful Tulip Flowers that it is tempting to tuck them in everywhere. But if you do this keep in mind that the broad, strap-like leaves will be conspicuous long after the jewels are gone. Getting uglier and uglier as they start turning brown.
This brightly colored jewel announces spring’s arrival, along with the cheery daffodil. The Netherlands is the world’s main producer of commercial tulip plants, producing as many as 3 billion bulbs annually, and the majority for export purposes. Moreover, most commercial Tulip Flowers cultivars are complex hybrids, and often sterile.
You would have to either live that or treat tulips as annuals by getting rid of the leaves after blooming and ending the plant’s growth. When Tulip Flowers are grown in more compact plantings, their leaves can be deliberately hidden by bushy annuals, perennials, or ground covers.
Though tulips are a perennial from a botanical perspective, several centuries of hybridizing mean that the bulb’s ability to come back year after year has weakened. As a result, a lot of gardeners treat them as annuals, planting new bulbs every autumn.
Also, buying Tulips bulbs can be confusing unless you know the different types. Here are a few major Tulip Flowers groups.
The “Double Late” is also called “Peony-flowered” tulips, have big many-petaled flowers and grow 2 feet tall or less. “Rembrandt” tulips are broken, that is stripped, or spotted; the colors are a combination of red, yellow, or white. Also, “Species” tulips are actually hybrids of several species, and are, for the most part, short-stemmed.
They include the early blooming tulipa kaufmanniana (waterily Tulip) which has open spreading, pointed petals, is often bicolored, and grows up to 8 inches tall; T. fosterana is also early, which has very large flowers and grows 12 to 18 inches tall. T. greigii, which is late-blooming, is less than a foot tall and has yellow and red petals. Species tulips especially T. kaufmanniana hybrids tend to the longer-lived than the taller types.

How to Grow Tulip Flowers?

Tulips like the sun but will grow and bloom in part shade, in fact, they prefer partial shade in warm climates. But be sure to keep the bulbs cool if you are not planting them right away; in hot climates give them a month of refrigeration before planting time.
So, you have to plant in mid-fall in well-drained, sandy loam. Also never try to deliberately water a bulb bed. Because wet soil leads to fungus and disease and can rot bulbs. Also add shredded pine bark, sand, or anything to foster swift drainage.
If you are planting them in a bed, dig plenty of organic matter into it. Scratch some high phosphorus fertilizer into the soil and plant them at least 6 inches deep; plant in wire cages if rodents are a problem. Moreover, if it rains weekly, you don’t need to give water. However, if there is a dry spell and it does not rain, you must water the bulbs weekly until the ground freezes. 
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Source: Almanac! Wikipedia
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