Growing Winter Flowers From Bulbs In Zone 10

We received a few varieties of winter flower bulbs for free with our order of vegetable seeds for free so I planted them in containers to see if they would germinate. they did, and flowers are just around the corner. The flower bulbs were planted about an inch and a half below the surface in a potting soil mixture. they were watered at least every third day in the morning and started to show shoots in a month or so. now, the flowers are almost ready to show and we expect to provide another video update of the flowers in a week or two.

If you are new to gardening the winter flowers that you can grow from bulbs are very easy and easily maintained.  Just provide water every few days if there is no rain and as much sun as available in the short winter days.  They are almost untouched by pesky insects and your friends and family will enjoy the colors and bright arrangements during the darer winter months.  Flowers are a wonderful addition to the kitchen garden but be sure you understand what you are eating before you eat a flower.  You really should check with a professional before consuming anything you are unsure of.  I am not a professional but the flowers from bulbs in this video are not eatable and cause digestion problems.

Growing Winter Flowers From Bulbs In Zone 10

Related Reading:

The Ever-Blooming Flower Garden: A Blueprint for Continuous ColorThe Ever-Blooming Flower Garden: A Blueprint for Continuous ColorThe gardener's fantasy of colorful blooms that begin in early spring and continue through the last glow of fall is now an achievable reality. With a little careful planning and the fun-to-use formulas in The Ever-Blooming Flower Garden, season-spanning  spectacular color is more attainable than ever before.

Author Lee Schneller developed her blueprint system when she began designing gardens professionally, and she has successfully applied it to more than 150 gardens. Now she brings her proven system to gardeners everywhere who continue to chase that elusive dream of perpetual bloom. 

Schneller's system is a wonder of organization and information - packed with checklists and questionnaires, planning equations and plant characteristics. Yet for all its wealth of information, gardeners of every level will find Schneller's techniques simple to use and her blueprints fun to customize. Readers choose from a list of 220 low-maintenance plants organized by bloom month and supported by a Flower Catalog with basic growing information and photos of all 220 plants.

By following five simple steps, readers develop a unique garden design featuring personally chosen plants that deliver height, color, and tons of blooms all season long. For added convenience, the completed planning chart also serves as a plant shopping list.

Once the blueprint has been created,  Schneller helps readers put the plan to work, offering advice on shopping, planting, and finally, enjoying and maintaining the garden.

Praise for the book:"The book lives up to its title: It is a blueprint for continuous color in the garden (at least from early spring to fall). There is instruction on mapping it all out on a grid -- and also instructions for those who don't want to put pen to paper. Don't be daunted; I'm not a mathematical person, but it makes sense to me. Lee Schneller, who has designed and built more than 150 gardens in Maine since 1995, takes you through the five steps to continuous color, including grabbing graph paper and a pen and checking out the plant palette and flower catalog in the back of the book. I particularly liked the flower catalog, which lists more than 200 trusty perennials selected for, among other things, their hardiness, attractive flowers and foliage, and long bloom time. The flower catalog provides the bloom period of each in a useful, graphical way. My only wish is that Schneller would publish a follow-up flower catalog for those who want more."  -Ann Robinson, oregonlive.com 05/06/09

"If you, like me, love color in the garden, both for admiring and cutting, you'll pick up The Ever-Blooming Flower Garden. The book lives up to its title: it IS a blue print for continuous color in the garden." - New York Newsday

"The book is divided into five parts, which follow a logical path to allow any homeowner with some basic growing skills to create an attractive continuously blooming flower garden."
-- Portland Press Herald, 7/14/09


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