Plant
This Fall for Beautiful Spring Bouquets
By Melinda Myers
[September 13, 2025]
This fall
plant an array of spring flowering bulbs to brighten your garden and
bouquets. There are plenty of daffodils, tulips, hyacinths and
alliums that will delight with an assortment of flower colors and
sizes that will bloom throughout the spring.
Include
animal resistant double, bicolor, and split cup daffodils that
provide unique beauty and impact in floral arrangements. Create a
simple bouquet with just a few stems of daffodils or an elegant
arrangement of single and double flowered varieties. |
Harvest
daffodils when the buds show color and are perpendicular to the stem
like a goose’s neck. Don’t worry about the sap daffodils exude,
shortening the life of the other cut flowers in the arrangement.
Properly conditioning the daffodils will eliminate the risk to your
other spring favorites Consider
wearing gloves as some people report itching or rashes when handling
these plants. Use your hands to harvest daffodils for the longest
stems possible and to reduce sap released from the stem. Reach into
the base of the flower stem, thumb pointed down and pull up. Cut the
stems of freshly picked daffodils to the desired length for
conditioning. Place them in a clean container of cool water and
floral preservative. Leave them in the water for three to six hours
when the sap stops flowing. Do not recut the stems before adding
them to mixed flower arrangements.
Tulips have long been a favorite of gardeners and floral arrangers.
Grow some taller varieties like Finola, Foxtrot, Silver Parrot
Tulips and Negrita Double (longfield-gardens.com).

Gardeners growing tulips strictly for cutting will
plant the bulbs in trenches and treat them as annuals. The
first-year bloom is always the biggest, but you can enjoy them cut
and try for a second and third year of flowers. Just cut the stems
short and leave at least two to three leaves on the plant to create
and store energy for next year’s bloom.
Harvest tulips when the buds are just starting to show color for the
longest vase life. Wait for double and parrot type tulip buds to be
fully colored but not yet open. Remove the whole plant, bulb and
all, if you do not plan on saving the plants for the following year.
Store the tulips upright with the bulbs attached. Cut and rehydrate
the stems in water just before arranging.
Wrap the stems in brown paper if they are cut in the garden or when
you rehydrate the stems and set them in several inches of cool water
for 12 to 18 hours. Keep in mind tulips continue to grow after cut
so plan for this when creating your arrangements.
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Harvest hyacinths for cutting as you did tulips. Pull
the whole plant, bulb and all, out of the ground if you are growing
them as annuals for cutting. Otherwise, cut only the stem and leave
all the leaves behind if you want the bulbs to bloom again next
year.
Include a variety of alliums in your planting plans this fall.
Alliums’ long and sturdy stems make them easy to harvest and
arrange. Purple Sensation, Mount Everest, drumstick allium and
Allium atropurpureum make excellent additions for floral bouquets.
Cutting and arranging flowers is a wonderful way to bring the beauty
of your garden indoors. The more you do it, the easier it gets, and
you’ll soon be sharing your flowers with friends, neighbors, family,
coworkers, and everyone who stops by to admire your gardens.
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books,
including the Midwest Gardener’s Handbook, 2nd Edition and Small
Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses “How to Grow Anything”
instant video and DVD series and the nationally syndicated Melinda’s
Garden Moment TV & radio program. Myers is a columnist and
contributing editor for Birds & Blooms magazine and was commissioned
by Summit for her expertise to write this article. Myers’ website is www.MelindaMyers.com.
[Photo courtesy of MelindaMyers.com]

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