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Enjoy
beautiful blooms indoors this winter by
"forcing" bulbs.
Imagine beautiful flowering bulbs brightening
your home in the dead of winter. Sure, you
can find them in garden centers in January
or February, but you can also grow your
own at a fraction of the cost. Just pick
up your choice of bulbs now at your Fred
Meyer Garden Center.
The bulb forcing
process is really pretty simple…
- Plant the bulbs about 13 weeks
before you want flowers. Using
a packaged soil mix, fill a well-draining
pot to within 2" of the rim. Set
bulbs in the soil, pointed ends up, no
more than 1" apart. The tops of the
bulbs should be just slightly above the
soil level. Water well.
- Store the bulb planters in
a cool, dark place for about 10 weeks.
The ideal temperature is about
40 degrees or less, but not freezing.
A spare refrigerator or unheated basement
works well.
- After 10 weeks or so, start
forcing the flowering process. Bring
some of your pots into a bright but cool
room (about 60 degrees). As foliage develops,
water and move into a sunny, warmer room.
You should be rewarded with beautiful
blooms and fragrance within about 3 weeks.
For
a succession of flowers, stagger
when you introduce pots to the cool room...
bring in a few a week for several weeks.
Bulbs that "force" best
include Paperwhite Narcissus, Daffodils
and Hyacinth (large bulbs). Amaryllis
bulbs are "pre-cooled" so they
don't have to go through the 10 week cooling
process before you start forcing the flowering
process. For other varieties, check the
labels on the bulk bins or bulb packages
and look for wording that indicates a variety
is "suitable for forcing."
So get planting. All it takes is a stop
at your Fred Meyer Garden Center!
While much of the information in these tips
is applicable in several gardening zones/climates,
some of the plants and timing suggested
are best suited to the Northwest, generally
in the mild/wet growing regions found along
the I-5 corridor. You should make appropriate
adjustments or consult local gardening experts
in regions whose climates differ from this
area of the Northwest.
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