Tulips. When they are brown and in place to be pulled up, do we replant them within the plunge? Or do we replant them the following spring? How should I store the...

Or do we replant them the following spring?
How should I store the bulbs?
DEPENDING WHERE YOU LIVE ,SOIL AND CLIMATE ARE FACTORS, FOR MODT AREAS YOU NEED NOT DIG THEM UP REMOVE BROWN AND WAIT TILL NEXT SPRING THEY'LL BE MORE BEAUTIFUL THAN THE YEAR BEFORE. AS FOR STORING BULBS BAGGIES SAWDUST SARK PLCE -YOU DONT WANT THEM TO DRY OUT. You don't need to pull them up..lately make sure you feed them. You may hold to separate them every few years.


Whether you leave your tulips within the ground, or dig them up and store them, partly depends on your soil type as powerfully as your location.

For most of us, it's fine to leave them in the ground, if the bulbs won't be disturbed, dug into etc. If you enjoy a very wet soil, sometimes they can rot, so lifting and drying is considerate. In this instance you can plant them late in the dribble, as they don't need the rooting time that bulbs such as daffodills need, which will start rooting from deferred August - northern hemisphere. In the north I plant Tulips from November, when there is no ground freezing.

If you life them, store them somewhere dry, where on earth they won't get eaten by animals, including rodents and squirrels. You can use net bags, perhaps beside some dry sawdust.

If you have a wet soil, it can be accommodating to plant them with some gritty sand underneath the bulb, as this helps drainage somewhat.

Hope this help. Good luck! Rob
Answers:    I don't know where you live but here in the south we replant contained by the spring and we store the bulbs in the refrigerator. If you live far enough up north you may can a short time ago leave them and let them come up surrounded by the spring.We store them in the refrigerator to be sure they get adequate chill hours or they will not bloom. You have to let them dry rather them pack them in sawdust in resembling a onion sack toss them in.