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  Category: Articles » Home & Family » Gardening » Article
 

Mulch Your Spring Flower Bulbs in the Fall for a Beautiful Spring Display




By Michael McGroarty

You are welcome to use this article on your website or in your newsletter as long as you reprint it as is, including the contact
information at the end. Website URLs must be active links. You are welcome to use this article with an affiliate link,
http://www.freeplants.com/resellers.htm

Mulch Your Spring Flower Bulbs in the Fall for a Beautiful Spring Display

Flower bulbs need a good, long, winter's sleep. Like some people we know, if they wake up before they are fully rested they get kind
of cranky, and then they don't bloom well at all.

Actually what happens is during a mild winter, the soil stays too warm and the bulbs begin to come out of dormancy early. They start to grow, and once the tips emerge above the soil line, they are subject to freezing if the temperatures dip back down below freezing. And that's usually what happens. After the bulbs have emerged, they freeze and then don't bloom at all, or if they do it's a very sad display.

Another reason this happens is because the bulbs are not planted deep enough. They may have been deep enough when you planted them, but as the soil goes through the freezing and thawing process, the bulbs can actually work their way up in the ground. One way to keep your flower bulbs sleeping longer, which will
protect them from freezing, is to mulch the bed.

In the fall just apply a 3-4" layer of well composted mulch. This layer of mulch will do a couple of things. It will maintain a higher
moisture content in the soil, which is good as long as the soil isn't too soggy. Well composted mulch also adds valuable organic
matter to the planting bed. Organic matter makes a great natural fertilizer.

A 3-4" layer of mulch also acts as an insulator. It will keep the soil from freezing for a while, which is good because you don't want the bulbs going through a series of short cycles of freezing and thawing. Then when the temperatures drop below freezing and stay there for a while, the soil does eventually freeze. Then the mulch actually works in reverse and keeps the soil from thawing out too early. Keeping it in a frozen state is actually good because the bulbs remain dormant for a longer period of time.

When they finally do wake up it is spring time, and hopefully by the time they emerge from the ground the danger of a hard freeze is past and they will not be damaged. If you can keep them from freezing, they will flower beautifully. The extra organic matter will help to nourish the bulbs when they are done blooming, and the
cycle starts all over again.

We also plant annual flowers in the same beds with our spring bulbs. By the time the danger of frost is past and it's time to plant
the annuals, the top of the bulbs have died back and are ready to be removed. The mulch that is added in the fall also helps to
nourish the annual flowers, as well as improve the soil permanently. Any time you add well composted organic matter to your planting beds, you are bound to realize multiple benefits. The
key words here are "well composted". Fresh material is not good.


 
 
About the Author
Michael J. McGroarty is the author of this article. Visit his most interesting website, http://www.freeplants.com and sign up for his excellent gardening newsletter.

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