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Garden Diary - October 2024


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A Year in Bloom, Flower Bulbs for Every Season, a book review
Friday, 11 October 2024



image courtesy Phaidon Press Limited


Leaves have turned from green to gold, orange, red. Then fall. flannel sheets on our bed. House plants hurried in from outdoors where they spent the summer. It feels like a withdrawing. But fall is also for planting.

Regardless of their time to flower, bulbs from spring crocus, hyacinths to tulips and daffodils, summer's lilies and autumn's colchicum are planted in autumn. Like an affirmation that this fall of the year, it too will pass. By planting bulbs in fall we are offered a hopeful look forward. Which bulbs to choose, where to plant and how to do it - advice is always helpful. A Year in Bloom is like an expanded catalog, offering options and possibilities, flowering bulbs, corms, and tubers for every season.

Sensible advice is needed because nonsense abounds. I saw something that suggested, "When planting directly into the lawn, don’t fret about placement. Just toss a handful of bulbs into the air and plant them where they land. In spring, they’ll look like they’ve been there for years. Trust me on this." Hmm yes, it is not so. Some of the bulbs pitched into the air will fall and hit your head, others drop at your feet, and any remainder roll away, to vanish under leaves. Straight rows look like a crop field. What to do? Sandy Snyder, a friend in Littleton, Colorado planted her buffalo grass lawn with bulbs in a spiral. Excellent solution.

A Year in Bloom is like an expanded catalog of 150 bulbs, offering a full page of image and information for each of a diversity of bulbs, corms, and tubers. Regardless of their time to flower, bulbs from spring crocus, hyacinths to tulips and daffodils, summer's lilies and autumn's colchicum are planted in autumn. Advice is always helpful, and Lucy Bellamy sought suggestions from nearly 50 "Nominators", most from the UK and the Netherlands, a handful from the USA, and a few from elsewhere. They are referenced in the book, and helpfully, in the index.

Let us look at Late Winter and Early Spring. Of course, snowdrops.

image courtesy Phaidon Press Limited
An established, naturalized planting of snowdrops, Galanthus, in Somerset, UK.
Then there are several pages of uncommon cultivars. Nice to know, difficult to find.

These two sections, for Late Winter and Early Spring, together with Late Spring make up the majority of the book. After all, bulbs are a plant's way to survive hard times and spring into quick growth while conditions are still difficult. Plus, just compare March and May, and it becomes quite obvious that early and late spring are very different.

Seasons turn, and there are sections for Late Spring.

image courtesy Phaidon Press Limited
Bearded iris, and a special two page spread on Cedric Morris' Benton bearded iris.

image courtesy Phaidon Press Limited
Summer, Autumn and Early Winter - the latter is where we find information about
bulbs in pots such as nerine, paperwhite narcissus, and a few hippeastrum.

image courtesy Phaidon Press Limited

A few pages at the end of the book offer suggestions: lists of bulbs by use: useful for pollinators, for scent, for naturalizing and more. Practical information: bulb essentials, how many, sustainability. A short glossary of terms.

And of course, a page of bulb vendors: mainly in the UK, a few for the USA, even a couple in France and the Netherlands. Because, now that you have perused the pages of A Year in Bloom and discovered the wide variety of bulbs to beautify your garden all around the year, you realize that you won't find everything in the big box stores.

For special items like the bulb-like corms of autumn crocus, Colchicum bornmuelleri,

you will need to look in the mail order catalogs such as Brent and Becky's Bulbs

So remember, start now with A Year in Bloom. Peruse its useful text and enticing pictures.
Choose those bulbs that appeal to you. Hurry and buy some right away. Because, as we now know


A Year in Bloom,
Flowering Bulbs for Every Season, a book review

by Lucy Bellamy with photographs by Jason Ingram
published by Phaidon
hardback, $39.95
ISBN 978 1 8386 6846 4


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