Gardening tips

Vegetable Gardening Section


Welcome to Gardening tips

Article

Easter Lilies, and the Number One Gardening Question Right Now
Doug Green

Everybody asks about Easter lilies! Can they go outside; can I plant them in my garden? And to this I reply, "Why not?" Like other bulbs,there are two options if you plant your leftover Easter lily bulbs - either they will live and flower for many years (it is perfectly hardy into zone 4) or they will immediately die. If you don't plant the bulb, it will definitely die. So you have nothing to lose by planting.
Once the Easter lily bloom has faded in the house, cut the stem back as far as you can. Grow the plant in a sunny windowsill, keeping it moist (not sopping) and feed weekly with houseplant food. After all danger of frost has passed wherever you live, you can plant it outdoors. Planting outdoors is as easy as digging a hole and planting so that the top of the bulb will be three inches below the surface.
Add a shovel of compost and a shovel of peat moss to the planting hole and ensure the soil is well loosened. Remember it is necessary to dig a large enough hole to spread the lily roots out and to ensure it is at least eighteen inches from another plant. Place the bulb in the bottom of the planting hole and backfill the soil up to the neck of the bulb – do not cover the green leaves. Covering the green leaves at this time could rot them.
Wait until the leaves have turned yellow and faded before totally filling in the hole. After you've planted the bulb, water it thoroughly. Carefully water and turn the area into a mudhole so no air spaces are left around the bulb.
The original foliage may die back immediately after planting. If this happens, cut the foliage right back to the bulb and then backfill the hole. Do not be surprised to see a new set of leaves emerge from the hole. Water thoroughly after backfilling.
The key to success with growing Easter lilies is to give the tops full sun but to shade the roots. Hot tops and cold feet would describe this growing condition. Also, excellent drainage is essential for bulb success. Poor drainage or clay soils will rot the bulb over winter because of excessive moisture.
Remember the normal time for the lily to bloom is mid-summer. The first planting year you may see a bloom in mid-summer but the likelihood is that the bulb will wait for next year to bloom again. Your job is to grow the bulb. Do not cut off leaves until they are well faded and quite yellow. Do not pin them up so other plants can grow next to the lily. You want those leaves to stretch out and absorb as much sunlight as possible because they are feeding the bulb and making next year's flower bud.
And next year's Easter lily bulb is what you're looking for, and the one after that, and the one after that too. If you're looking for other bulb information, check out this website.

About the Author

Award winning garden author

Home:http://www.simplegiftsfarm.com

Blog:http://www.simplegiftsfarm.com/gardens-gardening-news.html



Vegetable Gardening Best products


Vegetable Gardening News

vegetable gardening

Go to the new RSS page and renew your subscription.]]>

Read more


IMPORTANT: Bing News RSS feed has moved!

Call me a purist, but my vegetable garden is zoned for vegetables. By and large, the flowers go in the flower garden and the veggies are planted each year in deep, cushy soil prepared just for them, without floral competition. Even edible ...

Read more


Sunflowers brighten the vegetable garden

But some gardeners are switching from traditional in-ground gardening to a method by which vegetables grow without any soil at all. They are practicing hydroponic gardening, a method of growing plants with mineral nutrient solutions in water.

Read more


Vertical veggies: Tower Garden methods cultivate easy bounty

Cigna has broken ground on a vegetable garden to grow healthy food for people in need. The yield from the 20x40 foot plot on the campus of the company’s headquarters will be donated to Foodshare. Cigna is the first private company in the area ...

Read more


Cigna Breaks Ground on a Garden to Feed Hungry Neighbors

Huntington County, Ind. (Indiana’s NewsCenter) - The female inmates at the Huntington County Jail will see the fruits of their labor by harvest time. The Huntington County Jail partnered with Life Church to start a vegetable garden at the jail.

Read more


Huntington Inmates Start A Vegetable Garden

(NaturalNews) No one knows who discovered the benefits of composting by planting seeds in the refuse of human, animal, mineral and vegetable waste materials. Regardless of its origin, it's clear that life grows from death. Drawing new life from the ...

Read more


Benefits to composting for organic sustainability in natural vegetable gardens

They are starving. They are embarrassed to be so small and to produce so little. Grant, whose latest book is Texas Fruit & Vegetable Gardening: Plant, Grow, and Eat the Best Edibles for Texas Gardens (Cool Springs Press, $22.99), says most ...

Read more


A seventh-generation Texan’s vegetable guide

First time vegetable gardeners make two common mistakes, according to Marianne Binetti. First, they make their gardens too big. Second, they plant too early. She understands the first one. Buoyed with enthusiasm inexperienced gardeners take on ...

Read more


Garden columnist Marianne Binetti pens book on growing vegetables locally

Planning on planting a vegetable garden in your backyard this year? A recent survey by Garden Safe® brand showed that more than ever before Americans are planting edible gardens. In the gardening section at HGTV.com, Marie Hofer offers her top ten rules ...

Read more


Tips on planting a kitchen garden for savoring fresh vegetables, herbs & fruits

One of the things I enjoy each summer is having a vegetable garden. Gardening is something I have done my entire life and while weeding or harvesting on a hot summer day is not always the most enjoyable, having home grown vegetables each summer and through ...

Read more