Spring flowers ?

I plan to plant Daffodils...in a 6ftx3ft bed within a part of my garden.
When these enjoy finished should I lift the bulbs as I want to plant some more flowers for summer .. or can I will them in the soil and plant the other flowers around them. Any counsel please new to gardening... and what summer flowers should I be in motion for?


Answers:    You can go any way. We own some we take out and some we go away in, depending on what we are doing beside the beds that they are planted surrounded by.

Summer flowers can be whatever you close to. One choice is to plant other perennials that have different blooming period in equal bed as the daffodils. You can also plant some annuals such as begonias or impatiens.

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Leave them and plant other flowers around them. Theyir greenery will eventually die pay for and then you can cut it sour.

What else you plant depends on where you are and what type of look you are going for.
Try planting the Daffodils at the support of the bed in a 1' strip.
Then start out them in when replanting contained by the spring. You can tie the dying foliage in a twist, and mulch over to hide. You can cut the foliage rotten, but the Daffodils will not reproduce unless you leave the foliage on.
We put tulips below our flowers, because they won't come back here surrounded by Ga anyway.
I was told to other let the Daffodils leaves to die instinctively to allow the nutrients back into the bulb, and by the time you come to do the summer bedding (presuming you are using Annuals) they will be after well rotted adequate to take the unconscious leaves off, or remove the full bulb and store in darkened dry place in rag bags and next plant the bedding, but leaving the bulbs within the ground I think is an easier and better chance in my judgment, as they multiply and get more flowers respectively year if left indifferent,hope this helps
It is smaller amount work if you can plant over them and only thieve the dead leaves rotten once they have become brown and withered.

Try the following for summer bedding plants.

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Leave them in but don't cut the foliage down until 6 weeks after the flowers finish. If you snap stale the flowers as they die, you will get better daffs subsequent year because they won't use energy making seed. My favourite confident plants are any hardy geranium and penstemons, they are slugproof and can take any amount of involuntary abuse. Geraniums flower mostly surrounded by June and penstemons mostly August and later. Also astrantias are right and easy, but transport a couple of years to make a nice looking plant. All these will come subsidise every year with no more work than a sprinkling of fertiliser or a shovelful of compost
leave bulbs surrounded by ground they will multi ply over years to come,petunias,bizzy lizzies,geraniums,fushias,bego... beware of marigolds slugs and snails love them,still put slug pellets round plants ,not bulbs tho.hope you hold a stunning display next year
The daffs will be in good health over by the time you come to plant with summer bedding plants, plant spring flowering around them.
If you want to you can move up them, clean them rotten, dry and store them until re planting, a lot of work when surplus.
Daffs dont like to sit within wet soil, gross sure you have a nice sunny position, you can put a bit of grit surrounded by each hole as you plant them for drainage.After they finish flowering don't chop the leaves down as they will get on photosynthesising bringing food and energy rear down into the bulb which is the storage organ, leave them within the soil. There are so many flowering plants to choose from it merely depends on your taste. You could hold something evergreen that flowers in summer close to Azalea. Or perennials like Aquilegia is unbelievably pretty. Poppy, Primula, Geranium Delphinium, Roses. Good luck. x
Ashes from your charcoal grill or sand spread around or in your flower bed will hold on to slugs away.
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