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All products have a unique flower designs that horticulturalists
and gardeners will appreciate. Branded items include: t-shirts,
sweatshirts, sneakers, posters, skateboards, mouse pads, stickers,
bumper stickers, buttons, mugs, tote bags, invitations, greeting
cards, neckties, postcards, posters, prints and much more!
Tulip Care
Tulip care during the growing season is a concern
of many tulip gardeners. After all, you've invested
money and time in planting new bulbs in the fall.
You've fertilized and watered the garden after
planting.
Now, spring is unfolding and you want to make
sure that you get to see the flowers you worked
so hard to cultivate. You should take to properly
care for your tulips, before, during, and after
the growing season. Read this article to know
how to take care of tulips in your garden.
Tulip flowers are a hardy species, but if you
don't know how to deal with the main challenges,
your garden will suffer. Here are the top concerns
and issues with tulips before flowering.
Fertilize your tulip plants twice a year. The
best time to feed tulips is in the early spring
(before they bloom again). The best way to feed
them is to add a tablespoon of a granular fertilizer
on the soil around each bulb. This should be done
before flowering because feeding your tulips after
flowering could cause a disease.
Tulips need lots of water. If your garden gets
plenty of rainfall nature will take care of the
watering. If you live in a very warm area all-year-round,
make sure to water your tulip garden at least
once a week.
Watch out for animal pests. Rabbits eat more than
lettuce, they love to gnaw on tulip plants. Since
tulip shoots break through the soil before grass
and other vegetation grow, rabbits can be trouble.
You can prevent rabbits from eating your tulip
plants by using a physical fence, chicken wire,
cayenne pepper, or non-toxic commercial products
like Liquid Fence.
Like rabbits, squirrels can harm the tulip plant.
However, squirrels dig out and eat the tulip bulb.
One of the best ways to protect the bulbs is to
install netting over the bulbs when planting them.
That practice will deter squirrels from reaching
the bulbs. Once the bulbs have been planted, you
can sprinkle blood meal on top of the soil that
seems to repel squirrels.
Voles are another problem. Voles are small rodents
that burrow and dig tunnels underground. Voles
see tulip bulbs as food and will eat the bulbs,
destroying your tulip garden. Unfortunately, there
are not very many effective ways to remove voles.
Grubs are insects that are the biggest killer
of tulip. If the dirt in your garden has grubs,
use some time released insect/or grub killer on
the ground around them once or twice a year. Nurseries
and home garden centers offer various grub insecticides
in granular form that control these pesky insects.
Here's an additional tip:
The blooming season for tulips is between two
to three weeks long. You can plant other flowers
in the same garden as the tulips so that the new
flowers will fill in when the tulips die.
When days become longer and warmer, you will have
more time to enjoy your garden. By making time
for tulip care in the spring as your priority,
your tulips will grow tall, strong and beautiful
-- perfect for bouquets in your house.
Now, spring is unfolding and you want to make
sure that you get to see the flowers you worked
so hard to cultivate. You should take to properly
care for your tulips, before, during, and after
the growing season. Read this article to know
how to take care of tulips in your garden.
About the Author:
Dave Pipitone is a professional communicator,
spiritual gardener and entrepreneur, dedicated
husband and father.For more information on growing
a tulip garden that will be the envy of your neighborhood,
visit http://www.tulipreview.com.
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