Keyword /
Category
:
State:
City:
Select a state...
Business Name :
State:
City:
Select a state...
Plant Name
:
State:
City:
Select a state...
Close Advanced Search
Home
Advertise
Browse Plants
Browse Categories
Sign in
or
register for free
.
Other Categories
Annuals
Aquatics
Artificial Plants
B & B Plants
Bulbs / Corms / Rhizomes
Cactus / Succulent
Conifers / Evergreens
Ferns
Flowers
Fruits / Vegetables / Nuts
Groundcovers
Herbs
Liner / Plug / Starter Plants
Orchids
Ornamental Grasses
Palms / Cycads
Perennials
Potted Flowering Plants
Roses
Seeds
Shrubs
Trees
Tropicals / Houseplants
Turfgrass / Sod
Vines
Wildflowers
Expand your Search
Change your search radius (30) to:
40 miles
50 miles
60 miles
70 miles
80 miles
90 miles
100 miles
Go
Search by State:
All States
Alabama
Alaska
Alberta
Arizona
Arkansas
British Columbia
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Dist. of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Manitoba
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Brunswick
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
Newfoundland
North Carolina
North Dakota
Nova Scotia
Ohio
Oklahoma
Ontario
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Quebec
Rhode Island
Saskatchewan
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Go
Talk about Bulbs / Corms / Rhizomes in our
Message Board
!
Other Articles/Publications:
Solving Colchicum Problems
Prevent this by laying down a mulch layer over the corms right after the ground freezes in the fall. Moles tunnel through beds in search of earthworms and insects, but mice also use their tunnels to get at the corms.
Solving Gladiola Problems
Bulb mites are about 1/50 inch long, barely visible to the unaided eye. They attack below ground on gladiolus corms which become hard and light chocolate-brown colored. The dried corm pulp breaks up into corky fragments, on which hundreds of mites feed.
Problems of Crocus
During the winter months, squirrels and small rodents such as mice and voles eat corms. Or, try planting individual corms in tin can "sleeves" cut open at both ends and sunk into the soil so that the top rim is just covered.
Caring For Colchicum
It is important to allow the leaves that appear in the spring to age and die naturally so that the corm can acquire and store energy through them for blooming in the fall.
Caring For Gladiola
If they are in rows, simply stretch a string along the row on both sides of the plants and stake it at each end. For individual plants, drive a stake into the soil nearby, being careful not to harm the corm, and loosely tie the glad flower stalk to it with string or cloth strips.
Bulbs / Corms / Rhizomes
in Blytheville, Arkansas
Page 1
Red Barn
Blytheville, Arkansas (AR) 72315