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Jessie Keith
Amaryllidaceae
Narcissus 'Acapulco'
Acapulco Daffodil
A tazetta hybrid, this dainty daffodil has yellow tepals/petals surrounding a small orange cup. The fragrant, relatively small, clustered flowers appear on stout stems in spring.
Daffodils are hardy, long-lived, clump-forming bulbs that are good for naturalizing. Unlike tulips, they are poisonous, so their bulbs 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 to allow them to store plenty of fuel for next spring’s display. Once their leaves start to turn yellow, they can be cut to the ground.
Like all daffodils, these are superb long-lasting cutflowers. In the landscape, they couple well with late-blooming tulips and small spring-flowering shrubs. This cultivar is also excellent for winter forcing.
9 - 1
3 - 9
A2, A3, 1a, 1b, 2a, 2b, 3a, 3b, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24
Bulb or Corm or Tuber
Full Sun, Partial Sun
12"-18" / 30.5cm - 45.7cm
4"-8" / 10.2cm - 20.3cm
Spring, Late Spring
Hybrid Origin
Acidic, Neutral, Alkaline
Well Drained
Loam
Black Walnut Toxicity
Medium
Average Water
Clump-Forming
Spring
Showy
Yellow, Orange
Bicolor
Green
Yes
No
Single
Matte
Container, Cutflower, Feature Plant, Foundation, Mixed Border, Rock Garden / Wall
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