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Planting, Growing, and Caring for Daffodils
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Are you referring to digging up blooming daffodils and growing them indoors? Or to using daffodils as cut flowers?
We wouldn’t recommend digging up blooming daffodils to bring indoors, as they likely won’t last long enough to make the effort worthwhile. However, daffodil bulbs can be forced to bloom indoors, which is a different process (read more here).
As for using daffodils as cut flowers, it is certainly doable! Pinch them off near the base and keep them in cool water. They shouldn’t be paired with other cut flowers, as they exude an irritating substance called oxalic acid.
I had made the mistake of cutting down my Daffodil stalks too early after their bloom, and am deeply regretting it, as I do not remember when I pruned them in the years past. Is there a rare chance that they'll bloom next year? And if not, will they the year after? Thank you.
I,ve had my daffodil about 4 years and they have never bloomed. What is wrong? They are beautiful growing and the plants are full, just no blooms.
IF...they were able to feed themselves enough before you cut them back... there's a chance they may bloom again. HOWEVER, cutting the greenery back limits the plants ability to feed itself and store energy for next season. If you luck out, feed them well with bone meal & be sure to let them feed by leaving the green leaves til they die back on their own.
Zone 5. I had to do a rapid transplant of a dozen or so King Alfred daffs in early December (a veranda was being built over their location). They all survived the experience but have pushed up very vigorous triple or quad stems and healthy foliage ... but no flowers. I suspected they wouldn't bloom given all the disturbance, but quads and triples? I likely will need to move them again. What do you recommend?
I read that the Star of Bethlehem is invasive and also beautiful. Could you please post a picture so I can make a decision as to whether or not to plant it?
I have this plant in my garden and it does spread but it's very easy to remove. You could dig up the extra bulbs and transplant them or discard them. In the spring you can see where it's coming up as it looks like clumps of grass before it blooms. Since it's a spring blooming bulb plant it dies back to the ground after it finishes blooming. I tuck the new bulbs it makes along the edge of my blue-stone path. They look so pretty in spring and by summer they disappear. BTW - the bulbs are quite small (about the size of a crocus bulb) so they can't damage other plants when they spread.
It's nearly the end of Feb and I have 25 daffodil bulbs I bought before Christmas thinking they would get planted in the spring....duh....What happens if I plant now. Am located in upper SC. Thanks.
Fall 2019 I purchased a bag of bulbs at Lowes locally in Los Angeles. I planted them in December and they came up a few months later and put on a spectacular show. I left the greens on the plants as they faded away and removed them once they were clearly spent and left them in the ground. The garden is irrigated and much is drip, so they shouldn't have been super wet or totally dry, even though we did see some 115+ degree temps a handful of times last summer. Late Fall 2020 I added a nice variety of Daffs to some other areas of the garden the week after thanksgiving. Many of those new bulbs are starting to emerge and I'm excited to see them. It's still early, but I'm not seeing any sprouts from the bulbs planted in '19 and I'm wondering if they survived or if there's anything I can do to keep Daffs in Zone 10A. I think about pulling them and putting them into a refrigerator for a month or two and replanting late November or December. Its a lot of work, but they're truly spectacular, a treat for the eyes! Any recommendations? Thanks!
If the fall 2020 bulbs are coming up, you had enough chill time. It’s possible that the bulbs you bought in two different years are actually different varieties and will emerge at different dates during early spring.