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A little hint of what the pot should look like come springtime |
As a family, we are ones for tradition: every morning starts with a cup of tea, after dinner we all have a decaf coffee (rebels), and every Spring there is a Spring bulb pot. Its the one thing the mother does, without fail, every year, and she is masterful at it. How she crams so many bulbs into one pot I don't know, although I do now because I watched her do it this year. In fact I was rather involved in the entire process, far more than normal and therefore its likely to be a real damp squib come Spring.
The reason I was so involved this year, other than because I now insist on being consulted on anything to do with the garden, was because I was with the mother when the bulbs were bought. Being an ex-designer I of course believe that I know best about colour schemes so kept sticking my spoke in and we have gone for a completely different look this year. Last year the mother's pot was a triumph, looking back at it in one of my first posts, reminds me just how excellent it was. There was height, texture, colour, basically it was a pot of pure springtime joy. It had a rather definite colour scheme: white, pink and purple. This year we have gone for completely different colours, which Im now hoping will not be a mistake.
Owing to the fact that it is bulb season and therefore all pictures just make it look like you have become overly obsessed with onions and large garlic, I have photographed the fronts of the packets to spice up the bulb monotony and so you have some idea of what it should all look like in the end.
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The hand written numbers in blue are the depth in inches they want to be planted at, it helps the planting process apparently |
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Shogun bulbs |
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Muscari- a very small and crusty bulb |
After this year's discovery of Grape Hyacinths, my new favourite spring bulb, they were always going to be making a followup appearance in this year's version. I don't know where last year's bulbs went so I got a new packet which appears to be a different variety to last year's. Light blue goes well with orange so we should be good.
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Gavota Tulips breaking free from their rusty shells |
Get the colour of these 'Gavota' tulips, they are the perfect colour combination just with themselves. I don't think many people would immediately think to put bright orange with raspberry but when you see in a flower it reminds you just what a great combination that is. No way these weren't coming home.
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Tangerine Beauty bulbs, very similar to the other Tulip bulbs |
Tulip 'Vvedenskyi- tangerine beauty' is not actually the most exciting tulip I have ever seen but I thought the colour would add to the overall ambience of the pot.
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Crocus bulbs getting way too carried away with themselves with their tiny pale shoots |
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Again the narcissus are off, despite not yet being planted |
I hadn't really planned on these making an appearance in this pot... but never mind. I love these, so small and cute, and strangely geometric. I have had a real thing for daffodils and narcissi this year, a lot more on this to follow!
Rather than let this drag on too much I will stop here and leave the actual planting till next time.
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