- Oct 12, 2009
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pointers, please.
No pointers from me because you're in a completely different zone. Here, you plant them, and they come up year after year. I don't know how the dormancy period works for SC - here, they're well within the frost zone = they're at freezing temperatures during the winter.
Just read that on the Clemson extension site. We have a crap ton of squirrels. 3 large oaks and 1 hickory on my 1/4 ac don't help. Illegal to use a pellet rifle in the city on them. Not to mention there are houses all around.Some years ago I planted approx 100 bulbs.
By the end of the second year I had none left. Squirrels or voles likely ate them. So my recommendation is to use something like chicken wire etc to protect the bulbs from hungry varmits.
Fern
Just read that too. That's not going to happen. Happy to plant them once but I'm not digging them up and replanting them in the fall.In the south, you dig the bulbs up in the fall, throw in refrigerator, like in the vegetable bin inside (this winterizes them), and replant in Jan/Feb.
Just spent some time with the guy at the Clemson extension. Was thinking the plan was going to be iris's in the back by the fence, paper whites in the middle and the crocus across the front. Called my yard guy and he said the peonies are nice and would be good instead of the iris's....
I really should just make a plan and stop googling bulbs/plants.
Thanks guys.
Called my "yard guy" and said figure this out. I'll make the kid take care of it.Peonies always get powdery mildew by the end of summer.
Here are some other bulbs to look at depending on the light situation in your yard:
http://www.vanengelen.com/flower-bulbs-index/leucojum/leucojum-aestivum-gravetye-giant.html
http://www.vanengelen.com/flower-bulbs-index/ipheion.html
Sounds like a business opportunity. Deer baited field.Around here I can't get rid of them. They multiply like rabbits.
No pointers from me because you're in a completely different zone. Here, you plant them, and they come up year after year. I don't know how the dormancy period works for SC - here, they're well within the frost zone = they're at freezing temperatures during the winter.
can't plant them, too many squirrels and wild animals, and I am too lazy to dig them up every yr. ...the only bulbs I can plant are daffodils, they leave them alone, daffodil bulbs must have some defense chemicals in them.