Re: Bob's perennial tulips
- To: perennials@mallorn.com
- Subject: Re: Bob's perennial tulips
- From: B* C*
- Date: Mon, 28 Aug 2000 09:29:31 EDT
I do not- they appear to be Darwins based on bloom type and time, and they
are yellow with a very faint orange veining on them as they age. They are
planted in several spots throughout the garden in tight clumps-like somebody
dumped a pot of tulips into the ground after they stopped blooming. They
are very long lasting but I could wish they were anything but yellow.
Bob Campbell
>From: Cathy Craig <Batlette@home.com>
>Reply-To: perennials@mallorn.com
>To: perennials list <perennials@mallorn.com>
>Subject: Bob's perennial tulips
>Date: Fri, 25 Aug 2000 07:22:06 -0700
>
>Dear Bob,
>
>I don't suppose you know exactly which tulips these are?
>
>Bob Campbell wrote:
>Secondly, some of my best
>tulip plantings are grown under maple trees. The tulips bloom before
>the
>maples leaf out and provide shade. Obviously they get enough light to
>mature
>properly because the tulips have been there since before we moved into
>the
>house, which would be about 8 years now, and show no signs of declining.
>
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