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Get a Jump on the Season
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These Summer Bulbs Indoors for Jump on the SeasonTender bulbs respond incredibly well to a little tough love. Wake them up early and get a jumpstart on summer by potting them up indoors. It’s easy to do. This simple head start will afford you weeks more color from you bulb flowers in the summer garden.
Summer bulbs are available as bare bulbs for planting from late winter through late spring and as pre-grown bedding plants in pots in late spring through summer. In most parts of North America, tender summer bulbs can be started indoors four to six weeks prior to the usual last local frost date and then planted outdoors to begin their regular summer growing season.
A Quick List of Summer Bulbs to Start Up Indoors
If you want your garden to hit stride earlier in the season, these summer bulbs can be easily started up indoors, then moved outside once threat of frost is past in spring.
Achimenes (Magic Plant)
Aesaema Arisaema (Cobra Lily, Jack in the Pulpit)
Agapanthus bareroot
Agapanthus small pots
Alocasia
Alstroemeria (Peruvian Lily)
Amaryllis belladonna
Begonia
Bletilla (Chinese Ground Orchid)
Caladium
Canna
Colocasia esculenta (Elephant Ear, Taro)
Crinum (Swamp Lily)
Crocosmia (Montbrecia)
Curcuma (Gingers)
Cyclamen
Cyrtanthus (Vallota)
Dahlia
Eucharis (Amazon Lily)
Eucomis (Pineapple Lily)
Gloriosa Lily
Haemanthus
Hymenocallis (Ismene)
Incarvillea (Hardy Gloxinia)
Liatris
Oxalis
Polianthes tuberosa (Tuberose)
Ranunculus
Rhodohypoxis
Sprekelia (Aztec Lily)
Zantedeschia (Calla)
Zephyranthes (Rain Lily)
Xanthosoma (Elephant Ear)
Tips for Starting Summer Bulbs Indoors
1. Select bulbs (true bulbs, tubers, rhizomes, roots) that are firm to the touch.
2. To get earlier blooms, pot them up indoors to start growing about six weeks before your planting-out date, the date in your area when the threat of night frosts is past. Choose clean containers with drainage holes. Good drainage is essential. Use a commercial potting soil mixed with equal parts peat moss and a drainage material such as sand or Perlite.
3. Place bulbs in the soil mix, following the planting directions suited to that type of plant. Different types of summer bulbs require very different planting methods. Some are planted barely covered with soil, others deep, others laid in horizontally, some concave side up. For specific details related to planting depth and positioning, look for instructions on www.bulb.com (Summer Flowering Bulbs) or on bulb packaging.
4. Warm humid settings are optimal for growth. Keep soil moist, but not wet.
5. Once the threat of frost is past, transplant tender bulb plants to the garden or outdoor containers. Summer bulbs prefer warm soil, close to 60° F (15°C). This soil temperature is generally reached once nighttime temperatures have stayed at/or above 60°F (15°C) for about two weeks