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Planting, Growing, and Caring for Gladiolus
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Sure, you can plant them in pots. Just make sure the containers have drainage holes and use a good quality potting soil mix. Choose short to medium tall varieties and select container sizes accordingly.
Planted several a month ago. Most look good but some are turning brown and falling over. Don't know if it is a water problem or disease
when saving them where can i put them when i dig them up. i only have a car shed to put things in. i don't have a basement. or can i just leave them in the ground until after winter then dig them up . put and trans plant the little ones if i get any next spring in February . and I also read that its ok to plant them in clumps close together then to have then apart in 6'' I have a small garden space and it looks better to have things close together or i'll get butter cut growing in between every thing. would this be ok
I want to plant gladioli along the fence line but only where the posts are. How many bulbs would you suggest that I plant per post so that it looks neat but not too bare?
If depends on the width/breadth/size of posts, but with that in mind three or five would be nice. Odd numbers eliminate evenness.
I have a gladiolus garden that I leave planted all year, even during the winter. In southern middle Tennessee the winters are mild. I was going to move some of them this weekend but they are all growing, about 6 inches tall now, can I still move them?
Hi Susan,
You can move them if you dig carefully and get as much soil with the corms as possible. Plant them in the new spot and keep the soil nice and moist.
We dug up, moved & gave away aprox. 200 bulbs! So far all that were replanted are doing great! Can't wait for them to bloom! :-)
When i dug up the glads last fall, I separated the new large corm from the old corm that had bloomed and stored them for winter. But I also have 100's of baby corms as well. They are about the size of a large pea. What do I do with them? Do I plant them the same way as I do the large ones or just put them in a large plot and hope they will grow into larger corms this year or next year? I don't know what to do with them. Will they grow bigger over the next year or two and then plant them in the garden and hope they will produce flowers at some point in time?
The baby corms are called cormlets and will grow into a plant. Plant the small corms in a separate area of your garden. You can space them pretty close. They will grow into small plants but will not flower this year. Dig them up in the fall again and replant the next year. Usually they will bloom the second year.