Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Next gladiolus question
In planting zone 5 do you really have to dig up the bulbs each fall,
store them, and then replant them the following spring? I did a Google search and found the above info but I know that what you read is nor always "carved in stone". In fact, it seems like eveyone used to cover their rose bushes in the fall but now very few, if any, individuals do in our area. Don |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Donald Gares wrote:
In planting zone 5 do you really have to dig up the bulbs each fall, store them, and then replant them the following spring? I did a Google search and found the above info but I know that what you read is nor always "carved in stone". In fact, it seems like eveyone used to cover their rose bushes in the fall but now very few, if any, individuals do in our area. Don Hardy gladiolus can be left in the ground. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
dedmeat wrote: Donald Gares wrote: In planting zone 5 do you really have to dig up the bulbs each fall, store them, and then replant them the following spring? I did a Google search and found the above info but I know that what you read is nor always "carved in stone". In fact, it seems like eveyone used to cover their rose bushes in the fall but now very few, if any, individuals do in our area. Don Hardy gladiolus can be left in the ground. I think we will give it a shot and just leave them in over the winter and see what we get the following spring. Heck, at $1.97 for 30 we don't have too much to lose. :-) Don |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
"Donald Gares" wrote in message
... dedmeat wrote: Donald Gares wrote: In planting zone 5 do you really have to dig up the bulbs each fall, store them, and then replant them the following spring? I did a Google search and found the above info but I know that what you read is nor always "carved in stone". In fact, it seems like eveyone used to cover their rose bushes in the fall but now very few, if any, individuals do in our area. Don Hardy gladiolus can be left in the ground. I think we will give it a shot and just leave them in over the winter and see what we get the following spring. Heck, at $1.97 for 30 we don't have too much to lose. :-) Don Get them out in autumn if you want them to live and plant them in spring when ground temperature is 15 centigrades of celsius. Of course there are various sorts of gladiolus, early, mid or late (flower), the last we plant over here about 15. july. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Donald Gares wrote in news:42542F71.6070001
@crsales.com: In planting zone 5 do you really have to dig up the bulbs each fall, store them, and then replant them the following spring? I did a Google search and found the above info but I know that what you read is nor always "carved in stone". In fact, it seems like eveyone used to cover their rose bushes in the fall but now very few, if any, individuals do in our area. Don The big, floofy, commonly found in wedding and funeral bouquet arrangement glads are not reliably hardy in zone 5. Some years, with mulch for protection, we've had some of them (5 to 30%) overwinter next to the foundation. Other years, nada. Varieties called 'hardy' glads, which have smaller, more exotic-looking flowers, are more reliable and with mulch in the fall are reliably hardy. Glads are inexpensive enough and common enough that I just let em freeze and get me a new color selection in the spring Richard |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
extincted wrote:
"Donald Gares" wrote in message ... dedmeat wrote: Donald Gares wrote: In planting zone 5 do you really have to dig up the bulbs each fall, store them, and then replant them the following spring? I did a Google search and found the above info but I know that what you read is nor always "carved in stone". In fact, it seems like eveyone used to cover their rose bushes in the fall but now very few, if any, individuals do in our area. Don Hardy gladiolus can be left in the ground. I think we will give it a shot and just leave them in over the winter and see what we get the following spring. Heck, at $1.97 for 30 we don't have too much to lose. :-) Don Get them out in autumn if you want them to live and plant them in spring when ground temperature is 15 centigrades of celsius. Of course there are various sorts of gladiolus, early, mid or late (flower), the last we plant over here about 15. july. 15 centigrades of celsius? -- Travis in Shoreline (just North of Seattle) Washington USDA Zone 8b Sunset Zone 5 |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
european measure for temperature
"Travis" wrote in message news:u%G5e.1823$hB6.802@trnddc06... extincted wrote: "Donald Gares" wrote in message ... dedmeat wrote: Donald Gares wrote: In planting zone 5 do you really have to dig up the bulbs each fall, store them, and then replant them the following spring? I did a Google search and found the above info but I know that what you read is nor always "carved in stone". In fact, it seems like eveyone used to cover their rose bushes in the fall but now very few, if any, individuals do in our area. Don Hardy gladiolus can be left in the ground. I think we will give it a shot and just leave them in over the winter and see what we get the following spring. Heck, at $1.97 for 30 we don't have too much to lose. :-) Don Get them out in autumn if you want them to live and plant them in spring when ground temperature is 15 centigrades of celsius. Of course there are various sorts of gladiolus, early, mid or late (flower), the last we plant over here about 15. july. 15 centigrades of celsius? -- Travis in Shoreline (just North of Seattle) Washington USDA Zone 8b Sunset Zone 5 |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
International measurment...even in Canada
"extincted" wrote in message ... european measure for temperature "Travis" wrote in message news:u%G5e.1823$hB6.802@trnddc06... extincted wrote: "Donald Gares" wrote in message ... dedmeat wrote: Donald Gares wrote: In planting zone 5 do you really have to dig up the bulbs each fall, store them, and then replant them the following spring? I did a Google search and found the above info but I know that what you read is nor always "carved in stone". In fact, it seems like eveyone used to cover their rose bushes in the fall but now very few, if any, individuals do in our area. Don Hardy gladiolus can be left in the ground. I think we will give it a shot and just leave them in over the winter and see what we get the following spring. Heck, at $1.97 for 30 we don't have too much to lose. :-) Don Get them out in autumn if you want them to live and plant them in spring when ground temperature is 15 centigrades of celsius. Of course there are various sorts of gladiolus, early, mid or late (flower), the last we plant over here about 15. july. 15 centigrades of celsius? -- Travis in Shoreline (just North of Seattle) Washington USDA Zone 8b Sunset Zone 5 |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Paulo wrote:
International measurment...even in Canada Well not in BC. I watch a lot of the CBC news both local and national and I have never heard the weather report say tomorrow it will be 15 centigrades of celsius. They say it will be 15 and on the map it will have the "c" next to the number. -- Travis in Shoreline Washington "extincted" wrote in message ... european measure for temperature "Travis" wrote in message news:u%G5e.1823$hB6.802@trnddc06... extincted wrote: "Donald Gares" wrote in message ... dedmeat wrote: Donald Gares wrote: In planting zone 5 do you really have to dig up the bulbs each fall, store them, and then replant them the following spring? I did a Google search and found the above info but I know that what you read is nor always "carved in stone". In fact, it seems like eveyone used to cover their rose bushes in the fall but now very few, if any, individuals do in our area. Don Hardy gladiolus can be left in the ground. I think we will give it a shot and just leave them in over the winter and see what we get the following spring. Heck, at $1.97 for 30 we don't have too much to lose. :-) Don Get them out in autumn if you want them to live and plant them in spring when ground temperature is 15 centigrades of celsius. Of course there are various sorts of gladiolus, early, mid or late (flower), the last we plant over here about 15. july. 15 centigrades of celsius? -- Travis in Shoreline (just North of Seattle) Washington USDA Zone 8b Sunset Zone 5 |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Gladiolus question... | United Kingdom | |||
Gladiolus question!! | United Kingdom | |||
gladiola? Gladiolus | Gardening | |||
Gladiolus in a container? | Gardening | |||
Gladiolus in a container? | Gardening |