Good for Cutting
Many spring-flowering bulbs, including tulips and daffodils, make excellent cut flowers. Blooms that are wanted for decoration indoors should be cut as soon as they are safely beyond the tight bud stage and show their first color. Most will then remain in good condition for about a week, sometimes more.
Before combining tulips and daffodils in the same arrangement, keep them in separate vases for 24 hours. The sap from freshly cut daffodils can reduce the vase life of tulips.
Note: If you cut flowers from a bulb that you want to grow and bloom again next year, cut only the flower stem. The leaves need to stay attached to the bulb to store up energy for next spring's blooms.
Accent
Actaea
Allium Ambassador
Allium Christophii
Allium Gladiator
Allium Mount Everest
Allium Purple Sensation
Allium Schubertii
Allium Sphaerocephalon
Allium Unifolium
Allium White Giant
Apricot Beauty
Avalanche
Blushing Lady
Brackenhurst
Cheerfulness
Cockatoo
The Daffodil 100
Falconet
French Blend
French Blend Rose
Gay Kybo
Geranium
Globemaster
Green Day
Green Wave
Heart
Ice Follies
Jetfire
Marieke
Parrot Blend
Passing Fancy
Persuasion
Petal Pushers
Pink Cloud
Pipit
Professor Einstein
Red Cubed
Rems Favourite
See View Plait
Semper Maxima
Sir Winston Churchill
Spring Forward
Spring Loaded
Stainless
Sultans of Spring
Temples Favourite
Tete-a-Tete
Thalia
Three Queens
Virichic
Yellow Cheerfulness
Yellow Cubed
Zero Tolerance


