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Lucky Number Daffodil Bulbs Colorblends

Daffodil Lucky Number

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Daffodil Lucky Number

Many familiar daffodils are in decline. When a grower finds that a variety does not yield as it once did or that demand for it is falling, he moves on to new varieties. Like Lucky Number. Behold the future of yellow daffodils.
Deer and Rodent Proof

Item # 3318
Height 16—18 inches
Sunlight Full (6+ hours sun per day)
Soil Well drained
Flower Color Yellow
Bulb Size 15cm+
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Bulb size is determined by the circumference around the largest part of the bulb. Colorblends only delivers top size bulbs. Large bulbs produce more or larger flowers than small bulbs.
USDA Zones 3a—7b
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Hardy in USDA zones 3a to 7b in the South or 9b on the West Coast.
Bloom Time Early
Bloom times are relative within the spring bulb season, which varies from place to place and year to year. They are intended to help you plan a sequence of bloom from Very Early season to Very Late season. About two weeks separate Early from Mid and Mid from Late. The start and duration of bloom is heavily dependent on the weather. Warm temperatures speed up growth and flowering; cold temperatures slow them down.
i
  • early
  • mid
  • late

Sorry Daffodil Lucky Number is SOLD OUT

Quantity Price per bulb
25 to 75 $ 1.04
100 to 975 $ 0.72
1,000 to 4,975 $ 0.68
5,000 or more $ 0.64

Bulb Calculator

To find the number of bulbs you need, enter the square footage of the planting area in the box below.

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Planting Instructions

To get the most from daffodils, follow these 3 basic rules:

  1. Plant them where they will get at least 6 hours of direct sunlight, even after they have finished flowering and the trees have leafed out. Daffodils need lots of sun after they bloom to produce next year’s flowers.
  2. Plant them in soil that drains well. Avoid areas where water stands after a rain storm.
  3. After daffodils flower, wait at least 8 weeks — until the leaves turn yellow — before cutting them. Never tie or braid daffodil foliage. This year’s leaves = next year’s flowers.

If you want to naturalize daffodils (i.e., plant them so that they look as though they have sprung up on their own), we suggest that you set them out in drifts (not in blocks or lines) and that you space the bulbs farther apart than recommended on the bag label (to allow room for the clumps to increase in size). If you want to naturalize daffodils in a grassy area, you must wait to mow until their foliage has turned yellow, which means allowing the grass to grow very tall.

Depth of Planting Hole 6 inches
Spacing 4 inches apart

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