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COLUMN: Plant for spring colour

The garden giants of spring colour are giving way to their smaller cousins that actually repeat their performance year after year and leave a very soft footprint of dying and unsightly foliage.

Gardening

by Brian MINTER

The garden giants of spring colour are giving way to their smaller cousins that actually repeat their performance year after year and leave a very soft footprint of dying and unsightly foliage.

Yes, the big tulips, narcissus and hyacinths provide a great splash of colour and are important in the right locations, but minor bulbs offer us a subtle accompaniment to so many other spring plants and can make our gardens truly spectacular.

Snowdrops and crocuses are growing in popularity because they are old fashioned favourites and easy to plant. They perennialize readily almost anywhere in the garden to create an ever expanding display each year.

The tiny yellow buttercup-like winter aconite (Eranthis cilicica) is one bulb that sneaks ahead to bloom even before snowdrops. Its touch of yellow is a true spring inspiration during the cold grey months of January and February. It multiplies nicely among ground covers but looks particularly charming with dark ajugas, like ‘Black Scallop,’  dark foliaged thymes and compact, almost black heucheras, like H. ‘Obsidian.’

In recent years, more varieties of grape hyacinths (muscari) have been introduced into the marketplace than perhaps any other bulb. Blue is a refreshing contrast colour for so many other plants and bulbs, especially those with golden or red foliage.

There are some recent innovations that I think are truly spectacular. Muscari ‘Mt. Hood’ has clear blue flowers with  snowcapped white tops. In clusters they look sensational as do the similar M. neglectum with their dark blue flowers rimmed in white. If you love a little perfume, the first yellow variety, M. ‘Golden Fragrance’, is quite an attention getter.

These are all long blooming, mid-season varieties. There are a couple of quite pleasing later varieties. Muscari ‘Plumosum’ is a very large blue flowered variety that is very unique and M. comosum is a lavender coloured wispy variety that is so late it blooms with the alliums.

Muscari ‘Valerie Finnis’ is a very unique soft blue that lifts any combination.  All muscari need to be planted in groupings for the best effect, and they look great underplanted around dwarf forsythia and corylopsis (the variety well known as Buttercup Winter Hazel).

We love scillas in our own gardens simply because they bloom in May when most other bulbs are finished, providing a refreshing lift. The blues are nice, but I must admit that the white and pink Scilla campanulatas are fabulous. The pink, in particular, adds a new and important colour to our gardens. They multiply well too and yes, they even have a perfume.

So many folks who ask for old fashioned English bluebells are not quite sure what to request in terms of getting the right bulb. Well, Scilla nutans is the true English bluebell that thrives best in light shade and blooms over a long period of time.

These are just a few of the magical colours that could appear in your garden next spring and for many springs to come if you take a little time and effort to plant them this month.