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Planting, Growing, and Caring for Gladiolus
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Hi! We bought a house in Dec '15. In the spring '16, what looked like Glad stalks came up but never got flowers. This year '17, we had a unusually warm Feb. By March the Glads were in full bloom and beautiful. Then we had a cold snap, well below freezing. We covered them with plastic overnight. When we went out to uncover them the strong winds overnight blew the plastic off. And to top it off, it snowed! Now they are all laying on the ground. They are purple. Now the tips are a very dark purple, headed for black I believe. I have never had a green thumb, I even killed cactus once! I really need some help on what to do to try to save my Glads. I appreciate any advice anyone can give. Thanks!
You do not say where you are located but if an unusually warm Feb led to gladiola blooms in March, followed by snow…those are some extreme conditions! The flowers that grew and bloomed will not recover. If you are in a zone/area that usually experiences a normal winter, glad corms (the bulbs) should be lifted (removed from the soil) in the fall; stored in a cool, dark place for the winter; and replanted in the spring after the danger of frost has passed. There is no point in lifting them now. But you can cut out the flower stems/stalks, leaving the foliage, and leave them plants alone until they turn yellow and wilt; then cut them. And lift the corms.
I have just potted 4 GLads. different colours (got the bulbs from India), We r staying in DOha(Qatar)-in Middle east. One has grown almost a meter tall. now the climate her is cooling and it wlil be winter (min can go to 8-10 deg. C). How do i harvest the bulbs for next year?
I live in southern Maine and have had glads in the ground for the past four years. I mulch them in the winter and they have bloomed nicely every year. I have not had success digging and storing bulbs of various types during the winter as 35-50 degrees storage temperature is hard to achieve here. I note the bulbs should be planted 4" deep. A number of ours are surfacing and the plants are getting crowded. Can I dig the bulbs up in the Spring (vice late summer and storing them) and replant them then with any chance of success?
Hi Dan,
Yes, that is just the thing to do. When the ground thaws and there is no threat of a late freeze, go ahead and divide them. A little trick for making an easier job of it is to use a spade fork (a spade with four to five tines) to loosen the soil all around the bulbs. If you have access to a second spade fork (maybe ask a neighbor), place the two forks back to back and push them into a clump of glads, working them like scissors to separate the bulbs. Work them until you have small individual clumps and replant those. In the meantime, cover those exposed bulbs with thick layer of mulch.
What Media to use to plant gladilus, thank
Those are cormels (little corms). Gladiolas, though referred to as bulbs, are actually corms; the cormels are new corms that grow atop the old corm. They should be saved and planted next spring.
I have dug up bulbs to save for next spring,there are tiny (wee) bulbs growing on some of them do I save them or discard?
I live in North Carolina. when is it a good time to transplant Gladiolus
Did I pull up my glass to early, flowers have gone .