Returned
5788
results. Page
379
of
579.
Jessie Keith
(Large-cupped Daffodil, Thylacine Daffodil)
Hybridized and introduced by the Tasmanian David Jackson, and named for the extinct Tasmanian tiger, this large-cup daffodil bears yellow flowers with a generous deep-orange cup. They bloom on medium-tall stems from early to mid-spring.
Daffodils are hardy, long-lived, clump-forming bulbs. Unlike tulips they are poisonous, so they are not eaten by small mammals and their green tops are not browsed by deer.
These are some of the easiest bulbs to grow. They prefer full to part sun and require...
International Flower Bulb Centre
(Miniature Daffodil, Topolino Daffodil)
A cheering sight in early spring, this perky dwarf trumpet daffodil has starry, pointed, creamy-white petals and a relatively large, lobed, lemon-yellow trumpet. The grassy leaves are gray-green. This cultivar received the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.
Daffodils are hardy, long-lived, clump-forming bulbs. Unlike tulips they are poisonous, so they are not eaten by small mammals and their green tops are not browsed by deer.
These are some of the easiest bulbs to grow....
Jessie Keith
(Papillon Daffodil, Split-corona Daffodil, Trepolo Daffodil)
The split corona (cup) of this unusual and remarkable cultivar is split into six starry segments, each white with a broad orange midstripe. They are displayed against a rounded perianth of broad white petals/tepals. Bloom is in mid-spring on medium-tall stems.
Daffodils are hardy, long-lived, clump-forming bulbs. Unlike tulips they are poisonous, so they are not eaten by small mammals and their green tops are not browsed by deer.
These are some of the easiest bulbs to grow. They prefer full...
Jessie Keith
(Collar Daffodil, Trigonometry Daffodil)
A Grant Mitsch introduction with flowers of almost geometic precision, 'Trigonometry' has broad, porecelain-white petals/tepals, each partly hidden by a segment of the split, frilly, creamy-pink cup. The flowers are borne singly on medium-tall stems in early to mid-spring. This spectacular cultivar received the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.
Daffodils are hardy, long-lived, clump-forming bulbs. Unlike tulips they are poisonous, so they are not eaten by small mammals and...
Mark A. Miller
(Large-cupped Daffodil, Virginia Sunrise Daffodil)
Cultivar 'Virginia Sunrise' is a very pretty, large-cupped daffodil. Each blossom has six white petals that surround a large central cup with ruffled edges. When blooms first open, the cups are light yellow but then deepen to golden orange. Virginia Sunrise daffodils begin to flower in mid- to late winter, but later in colder winter areas.
Daffodils are some of the easiest bulbs to grow. They excel in full to partial sun and require average to fertile soil that doesn't remain soggy after rains....
Jessie Keith
(Large-cupped Daffodil, Split-corona Daffodil, Wild Honey Daffodil)
The butter-yellow, white-eyed flower of this large-cup daffodil holds a long, cylindrical corona which assumes amber tones as it ages. The solitary flowers are borne on medium-tall stems from early to mid-spring.
Daffodils are hardy, long-lived, clump-forming bulbs. Unlike tulips they are poisonous, so they are not eaten by small mammals and their green tops are not browsed by deer.
These are some of the easiest bulbs to grow. They prefer full to part sun and require average to fertile soil....
Jessie Keith
(Small-cupped Daffodil, Wychavon Daffodil)
The snow-white petals/tepals of this large-cup daffodil are accented by a broad, creased, red-orange cup with a yellow eye. Bloom is from early to mid-spring on medium-tall stems.
Daffodils are hardy, long-lived, clump-forming bulbs. Unlike tulips they are poisonous, so they are not eaten by small mammals and their green tops are not browsed by deer.
These are some of the easiest bulbs to grow. They prefer full to part sun and require average to fertile soil. After blooming, it is good to...
Jessie Keith
(Jonquilla, Yazz Jonquil)
The clustered, fragrant, creamy-white flowers of this Jonquilla hybrid are ornamented with peachy-pink, orange-rimmed cups. They bloom in mid-spring.
Daffodils are hardy, long-lived, clump-forming bulbs. Unlike tulips they are poisonous, so they are not eaten by small mammals and their green tops are not browsed by deer.
These are some of the easiest bulbs to grow. They prefer full to part sun and require average to fertile soil. After blooming, it is good to let their green tops photosynthesize...
International Flower Bulb Centre
(Double Daffodil, Yellow Cheerfulness Daffodil)
The small, clustered, pale greenish-yellow flowers of this 1937 introduction have a central yellow "rosebud" of doubled segments. The intensely fragrant flowers bloom from mid- to late spring, very late in the daffodil season. Still a popular cultivar more than 70 years after its introduction, this cultivar received the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.
Daffodils are hardy, long-lived, clump-forming bulbs. Unlike tulips they are poisonous, so they are not eaten by small mammals...
Gerald L. Klingaman
(Jonquilla)
Every gardener who knows them looks forward to the bright fragrant blooms of the jonquil. A small perennial bulb from the Iberian peninsula, it forms robust clumps and self-sows where happy. Additionally, its bulbs, leaves, and flowers contain compounds that repel hungry garden rodents and foraging deer.
The dark green, glossy, rush-like foliage appears as early as autumn in mild climates. At any time from late winter to late spring, depending on the variety and the region, upright, calf-high...