Bulbs | Okanagan Xeriscape Association https://okanaganxeriscape.org Gardening with Nature Sat, 22 Oct 2022 02:01:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://okanaganxeriscape.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/cropped-favicon-OXA-32x32.png Bulbs | Okanagan Xeriscape Association https://okanaganxeriscape.org 32 32 Spring Bulbs https://okanaganxeriscape.org/spring-bulbs/ https://okanaganxeriscape.org/spring-bulbs/#respond Sat, 22 Oct 2022 01:56:46 +0000 https://okanaganxeriscape.org/?p=32288 Fall is the ideal time to get a jump on next year’s garden by planting a pop of colour in the spring garden.

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Gardening with Nature

Article by Sigrie Kendrick

Plant spring bulbs now for xeriscape colour later

In addition to perennials, fall is the ideal time to get a jump on next year’s garden by planting bulbs to provide a pop of colour in the spring garden.

A xeriscape flower that many people don’t think of is the spring-flowering bulbs such as narcissis, crocus, tulips and scillas.

Drought-tolerant or technically, drought-avoidant bulbs, bloom before the heat of the summer season and benefit from dry conditions once they have finished blooming.

Since our mandate is to help educate people about ways to conserve water used on the landscape, promoting spring bulbs is right up there with hiking for a fun fall activity, in my books.

Winter Aconite (Eranthis Hyemalis)
Winter Aconite (Eranthis Hyemalis)
Turkestan onion (Allium karatievense) Spring bulb
Turkestan onion (Allium karatievense)

Two of my favourites

One of the earliest bulbs to appear in spring is Winter Aconite (Eranthis Hyemalis) which pokes its cheery yellow head up as early as late February, often in the same time frame as snowdrops, although it is not as common.

It is well worth searching out this bulb as it will naturalize in your garden and in time allow you to share some bulbs with your friends.

It seems that few gardens in the Okanagan are untouched by marauding deer, so homeowners are always on the lookout for plants those pesky animals tend to shun. Another great bulb for the spring garden is the Turkestan onion (Allium karatievense), a member of the onion family. That means it is ‘stinky’ to deer, although not to us, and as such it’s usually not on the menu for our four-legged friends.

Narcissus poeticus

Narcissus poeticus

Daffodils

Narcissus in the UnH2O garden

The Narcissus Family

Another bulb deer tend to go by without nibbling is the narcissus family.

These can provide up to six weeks of bloom with a selection of early, mid, and late-flowering varieties, plus they are readily sourced at nurseries or big box stores.

One of the varietals that we planted recently in the OXA UnH2O Xeriscape Demonstration Garden on Gordon Drive, is the absolutely-stunning Narcissus poeticus, which is, ironically, one of the oldest daffodils to be cultivated, dating back to ancient times.

I’m enamoured with its simple shape and pure white petals, so different from the brassy yellow we usually associate with daffodils.

No matter what you decide to plant this fall, the anticipation of a colourful array of spring flowers from your fall bulb planting will help you through the dark winter days to come.

Crocus in the Okanagan spring

Crocus chrysanthus

Galunthus nivalis - snowdrop

Galanthus nivalis

Follow OXA on Facebook and Instagram for fantastic photos of inspiring xeriscape gardens from around the valley which dispel the myth that xeriscape is simply rocks and cacti. Sigrie Kendrick is a Master Gardener and Executive-Director of the Okanagan Xeriscape Association. She can be reached at 778-363-8360 or by email at exec_dir@okanaganxeriscape.org.
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Allium for the Xeriscape Garden https://okanaganxeriscape.org/allium-for-the-xeriscape-garden/ https://okanaganxeriscape.org/allium-for-the-xeriscape-garden/#comments Thu, 11 Feb 2021 20:53:43 +0000 https://okanaganxeriscape.org/?p=31025 Allium can provide wonderful additions to the xeriscape garden

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Gardening with Nature | January 2021

Article by Sigrie Kendrick

Planning your garden should unquestionably include bulbs. There are many drought-tolerant bulb options available, ranging from common crocuses to specialty Triteliea and everything in-between.

One of the ‘everything in-between’ categories which offer both common and uncommon varietals can be found in the Allium or Onion family. The Allium genus is comprised of more than 700 species grown for both culinary and ornamental purposes.

In the Okanagan Xeriscape Association’s demonstration garden on Gordon Drive in Kelowna, we grow a variety of Alliums and we always have bulbs available for purchase at the annual OXA Spring Plant Sale, the primary fundraiser for this non-profit organization.

Both Allium cernuum and Allium karataviense are great drought-tolerant bulbs to consider adding to your garden.

Allium cernuum, commonly called Nodding Onion is featured in our native garden and it occurs locally in grasslands and dry, open, rocky sites. This species is the most common native onion in the Southern Interior and is easily identified by its pink to rose, occasionally white, drooping or nodding flower heads held on top of leafless stocks, reaching a height of 12-18 inches with a spread half its height.

Like all the Allium family, Nodding Onion emits a strong onion odour when cut or bruised and as such is not favoured by deer. Interior native people had many culinary uses for Allium cernuum and it was also used traditionally as a disinfectant and to alleviate insect bites. This perennial is hardy in zones 4-8, blooming from June to August in full sun to part-sun locations and it attracts a variety of pollinators.

Saskatoon, Amelanchier alnifolia

Fig. 1  – Nodding Onion (Allium cernuum), Gwen Steele

Allium karataviense or Turkistan Onion is an ornamental onion native to Central Asia, specifically Kazakhstan, grown for both its soft pink umbrel flowers, reaching approximately 12 inches in height, and for its green-grey foliage. Allium karataviense blooms earlier in the season and is typically in flower in the OXA demonstration garden in May, delighting those in attendance at our annual Spring Plant Sale.

Allium karataviense is an important source of food for pollinators, especially butterflies. This perennial is seldom bothered by pest or disease but can suffer from bulb rot in overly irrigated, poorly drained sites.

Allium bulb types are late spring/early summer bloomers that go summer dormant. You can cut bulb-types to ground level when foliage begins to turn yellow in summer.

Saskatoon, Amelanchier alnifolia

Fig. 2  – Turkistan Onion (Allium karataviense), Gwen Steele

A relatively new addition to the Allium scene is the cultivar, Allium ‘Millenium’, and while not currently planted in the demonstration garden, volunteers have been testing this perennial in their private gardens and we look forward to introducing it to the UnH2O demonstration garden in the coming year.

This hybrid ornamental onion is easily grown in average, well-drained soil in full to part-sun locations and produces masses of rose-pink globe-shaped flowers at a height of 15-20 inches, with a similar spread. This Allium is not a bulb and hence blooms later in the season. It can be found in flower in mid to late summer, often covered with hungry pollinators. It should be cut to the ground in the late fall.

Allium ‘Millenium‘ was awarded the ‘Plant of the Year’ by the Perennial Plant Association for 2018.

All the above Alliums make excellent cut and dried flowers where their globe-shaped blooms provide an interesting contrast to more traditional flower forms.

Though many Allium are traditionally planted in the fall, ‘Millenium‘ is available from many bulb companies with a shipping date to our planting zone beginning in the first week of May.

Fig. 3 – Allium Millenium, Sigrie Kendrick

Fig. 4 – Allium Millenium, provenwinners.com

If you want some stunning floral displays in your xeriscape garden, think of the Allium family.

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