The other season for crocus
by
Douglas Hunt
(IC: professional)
Most people think of crocus as a harbinger of spring, but there are species of crocus (and related cousins) that bloom in the fall, including the crocus that saffron comes from. Their purple flowers look spectacular with the oranges and yellows of changing leaves. They are planted in late summer and bloom four to six weeks later, or sometimes while still in the bag if you don't get them in the ground in time. It's late for planting them this year, but you may well get good deals on ones that have already bloomed, and you can tuck them in the ground for next fall. Matt Mattus has a great guide to them on his Growing with Plants blog: http://www.growingwithplants.com/ .
And you can see some blooming in a Hometalk member's garden here:
http://www.hometalk.com/search?filter=autumn+crocus&search=&zipcode=#!/545715
And you can see some blooming in a Hometalk member's garden here:
http://www.hometalk.com/search?filter=autumn+crocus&search=&zipcode=#!/545715
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Published September 29th, 2012 8:05 AM
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Douglas Hunt on Oct 04, 2012Leida, autumn crocus foliage is generally more grasslike. You would see the leaves in the spring, which would fade before the blooms come up. If you have that foliage and blooms at the same time, you have something else.
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