A bona fide essential for any spring garden – Narcissi are great for waving goodbye to winter and welcoming spring with wonderfully bright trumpet flowers.
This collection of 100 miniature daffodils will perform to perfection in almost any garden setting.
A mixture of shades and floral shapes can be seen dazzling in this collection, which looks simply outstanding when planted all together.
Perfect for underplanting trees and shrubs, or for placing in natural looking drifts through borders and lawns.
They are also fantastic for filling pots and window boxes, while making ideal cut flowers to bring natural beauty and smells inside the home.
Short stems make these particularly robust and able to withstand spring winds that can so often flatten taller varieties, so they?ll remain perfect.
For best impact, grow this collection in sun or partial shade in free-draining soil and they?ll naturalise, gradually multiplying over the years to give you more and more flowers. Nothing could be easier.
Supplied as 100 bulbs in a mixed bag, size 8/10, ready to plant from autumn.
Care Information
Planting advice for your Narcissus bulbs
- Plant bulbs at twice the depth of the height of the bulb and four times their width apart. e.g. 5cm tall bulbs need to be planted 10cm below the surface of the ground and 20cm apart.
- They are fine to plant even if a little green growth is showing, they?ll just need a good watering when you plant them, and then only when the soil is dry.
- Leave them in the ground once they die back for flowers again next year.
- While all the energy that a bulb needs in order to grow is stored in the bulb itself, they will do better if you feed them when in active green growth.
- Plant in herbaceous borders, in pots, or leave in the ground to naturalise.
- If planted in pots be sure to water frequently and keep moist.
Aftercare advice
- Daffodils can be planted as late as December, but it?s best to get your bulbs in the ground so that they can establish a good root system before the weather becomes too cold.
- Plant in herbaceous borders, in pots, or leave in the ground to naturalise.
- Water frequently and if in pots ensure that the compost doesn’t dry out.
Cutting back your daffodils
- Once flowering is over, it is important to leave the leaves on until they have died right down, usually by early summer. This allows the bulb to store food and produce flowers the following year.
- Never tie up the leaves or cut it back whilst it is still green.















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