Also receive the Daily newsletter including gardening tips, weather, astronomical events, and more.
Planting, Growing, and Caring for Gladiolus
ADVERTISEMENT
You can plant some shallow-rooted annuals on top of the corms if your containers are deep enough and have good drainage. If you water only when the soil is dry the corms will be fine. Don't remove the glad foliage until it has turned brown.
I live in Terrebonne, OR zone 6 can I put my glads in the ground now since they have finished blooming? They are in a pot now. Can I leave them in the ground all winter, or should they be lifted?
o
In Oregon, you'll need to dig and store glads in a dark, dry and cool place. See more detail on this page.
can I transplant full bloom gladiolus without putting them in shock
If you can't wait until the leaves start turning brown you can carefully transplant the glads now. Dig deep and make sure to get most of the roots and lots of soil around the corms. Then quickly plant them in the new location and water well. You may need to support the stalks so that they don't fall over.
I planted the bulbs and have been watering regularly. However, I'm seeing brown brittle leaves/stalks on them. Am I watering too much? It has been in the 100s in last few days.
Please advise.
It sounds like your glads could have a virus so I would pull them out. Heat stress could also be causing them to turn brown.
once my glads have bloomed, one per bulb (and they were gorgeous) may I cut back the greenery as it becomes torn and droopy?
Luanne, you should remove the flower spike after the blooms fade but leave the plant's foliage. Continue to water and weed. When the foliage fades and dies (turns yellow), lift the corm for starage and cut the stem/foliage back to about 1/2 inch from the corm.
There are a lot of small shoots growing up from my gladiolus. What does this mean. Does it mean they should be dug up and separated? If so, when should that be done?