I came up with what I thought was a brilliant and simple idea. To plant snowdrops and bluebells under the LolliPop Trees Elaeagnus ebbingei and Viburnum Tinus trees. It would look beautiful in the cold winter months, white snowdrops peaking up in late January and as we begin to enter spring the bluebells would then come into flower. We have the perfect woodland setting and I felt the Snowdrops and Bluebells would compliment the trees. As I like to think about nature, I chose the snowdrops hoping it would provide any early bees with much needed flowers in the hard late winter and early spring.
There I was all excited and ready to plant, as I attempted to get the bulb planter into the ground the reality of what I was attempting to do hit me. I am trying to plant bulbs among the roots of trees, in clay soil that has had three children running around on all through the summer. Hard compacted clay with no real rain in a few months. This was not going to be the simple job I had visions of.
The truth, is it was very hard work. I started with a bulb planter, it broke after one go. Then a trowel and hand fork came out and nope that did not work. The last try was the small spade, it was still hard work, sometimes I had to stop and start in a slightly different place. It took me a good four hours over two days, though I am limited for time with a toddler.
Bulbs are an amazing way to get some simple colour in the garden and with the right tools are easy to plant and grow. For Spring flowering pants you still have time to get them planted and tuplis are best planted in November so lots of time.
I ordered some English Bluebells and single flower Snowdrop bulbs from J Parkers, 75 of each. I could do with more but they do naturalize, so in theory we should get more every year. This is enough to start with and the bank balance had to be considered.
There I was all excited and ready to plant, as I attempted to get the bulb planter into the ground the reality of what I was attempting to do hit me. I am trying to plant bulbs among the roots of trees, in clay soil that has had three children running around on all through the summer. Hard compacted clay with no real rain in a few months. This was not going to be the simple job I had visions of.
The truth, is it was very hard work. I started with a bulb planter, it broke after one go. Then a trowel and hand fork came out and nope that did not work. The last try was the small spade, it was still hard work, sometimes I had to stop and start in a slightly different place. It took me a good four hours over two days, though I am limited for time with a toddler.
One small spade helping to dig the holes |
I really hope they work and will keep you posted, I also learned a few lessons along the way.
Think about where your planting the bulbs - the area, the soil, whats panted around. Will your plants work there, Snowdrops and Bluebells are woodland plants so are ideal for under the trees. Most bulbs will tell you if they can tolerate shade.
Do you have the right tools - a sturdy bulb planter, I found a cheap one will not work unless you have a perfect soil. A trowel or small spade will help. Wrong tools and the job can really take a long time.
Think about where your planting the bulbs - the area, the soil, whats panted around. Will your plants work there, Snowdrops and Bluebells are woodland plants so are ideal for under the trees. Most bulbs will tell you if they can tolerate shade.
Do you have the right tools - a sturdy bulb planter, I found a cheap one will not work unless you have a perfect soil. A trowel or small spade will help. Wrong tools and the job can really take a long time.
One rather broken bulb planter |
I measured the bulb planter against the spade so I dug a deep enough hole for the bulbs.
How will they look when they flower in the spring as to how you plant them. I made the mistake of planting a couple of snowdrops as single flowers. So I then planted them in little groups of three.
Three little bulbs ready to grow |
If you are planting over a couple of days maybe some little stick markers, to show where you have planted the ones before. Again I learned this the hard way and they may come up in some random places.
Bulbs are an amazing way to get some simple colour in the garden and with the right tools are easy to plant and grow. For Spring flowering pants you still have time to get them planted and tuplis are best planted in November so lots of time.
Well done for persisting! I think I'd have lifted a few centimetres of soil, scattered the bulbs and popped the soil back on top as the thought of planting 150 tiny bulbs would have had me reaching for the kettle and a sit down!
ReplyDeleteHahaha I was pretty shocked by my determination to get the job done and I did have a huge cuppa after
DeleteI love these posts! We've planted some bulbs in our back garden after being inpsired by you! Thanks so much for sharing with #Blogstravaganza xx
ReplyDeleteI am so glad you have planted the bulbs and hope they work well for you xx
DeleteI wish I knew more about gardening, we have a decent sized mature garden and an area at the back under trees that sound very similar to this. Bluebells and snowdrops are so pretty x
ReplyDeleteThanks for joining #Blogstravaganza
They are so simple and beautiful think that's why I love them. Just hoping they flower. Maybe you could try planting some when they are in the green in the early spring x
DeleteWe have literally just planted our bulbs ready for next year. Some great tips, thanks for linking up with #fortheloveofBLOG x
ReplyDeleteHow lovely, bulbs are such a great way to add springtime colour and joy x
DeleteI have similar situation problems to you , and am pretty much a virgin (gardener!) so thought I would buy some "in the green " in new year , hoping that means already sprouting up so you can see exactly where and what...... will let you know. Took me HOURS to plant some other bulbs under a Copper beech tree!
ReplyDeleteWow well done that must have been real hard work. Let's hope they come back this year and you can just enjoy them xx
DeleteAh I love snowdrops - they always remind me of my nan as they were her favourites. I've had a garden tidy-up but need to think about what I'm going to re-plant! #blogstravaganza
ReplyDeletebest part the re planting. I am sure it will look amazing. and if not get to try some new plants xx
DeleteYou've inspired me to look into planting some spring flowers in our garden :) Hope your bulb planter recovers soon! lol. Thank you for joining in with the #HoneybeeLinky, hope to see you for the next one! xxx
ReplyDelete