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Breck's
U.S. Reservation Center
P.O. Box 65
Guilford, IN 47022-0065
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Gardening How-To – Tips & Growing Instructions: Daffodils 
A successfully naturalized daffodil
field can bloom for up to 30 or even 50 years! First, choose an
area with good drainage and sunlight. An area where grass can be left
unmown until the foliage has matured is ideal. Hillsides are excellent
spots. The edges of woods are also good, if you are planting an
early-blooming variety which will have a chance to mature before the
trees come into full leaf. For best impact, plant drifts of like kinds
and colours. Many gardeners “arrange” their drifts simply by taking
handfuls of bulbs and throwing them about for a natural-feeling
distribution -- just dig where the bulbs land!
When naturalizing daffodils,
you will get the best results and many years of blooms by taking the
time to plant properly. For most naturalizing projects, you will be
working in uncultivated soil with thick sod, so it is necessary to give
each bulb a small custom-cultivated hole. Usually, this means lifting
out soil with a spade. One clever way to make precise bulb holes is to
use a battery-powered drill – a half-inch drill with a 3” bit usually
does the job. Work up the soil from the hole with some peat moss, sand
and about a tablespoon of low nitrogen fertilizer. Refill the hole to
just below the planting depth with this mix. Next, add one handful of
sand and then the bulb (you do not want the bulb in direct contact with
the fertilizer). Then fill the hole the rest of the way with sand and
replace some of the sod. With a sub-layer of rich, fertilized soil to
send roots into, your daffodils
will grow even stronger and bloom for years!
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