Bulbs to Buy
223
Approx Rows
15
Подробное руководство скоро
Мы работаем над подробным учебным руководством для Flower Bulb Calculator. Вернитесь позже для пошаговых объяснений, формул, реальных примеров и экспертных советов.
Flower bulb calculation determines how many bulbs to purchase to fill a garden bed, container, or landscape area with the desired planting density for optimal visual impact. Bulb gardening is one of the most rewarding and accessible forms of gardening — according to the Netherlands Flower Bulb Information Center, Americans purchase and plant over 3 billion spring-flowering bulbs annually, making tulips, daffodils, and hyacinths among the most popular garden plants in the country. The calculation depends on the planting area, the type of bulb, and the desired spacing for the intended visual effect. For a solid carpet of color, tulips are typically planted 4–6 inches apart; for naturalized effects where bulbs gradually spread and look wild, daffodils work best at 6–8 inches apart. Container plantings use 'lasagna' layering — different bulbs planted at different depths in the same pot to extend the bloom sequence from early spring through late spring. Understanding bulb quantities prevents under-purchasing (gaps in the planting) and over-purchasing (wasted investment). Properly planned bulb plantings create stunning spring displays that return year after year with minimal maintenance.
Bulbs Needed = Planting Area (sq ft) × Bulbs per Square Foot Bulbs per sq ft = 144 / (Spacing in inches)^2 [for square grid spacing]
- 1Step 1: Measure the planting area in square feet.
- 2Step 2: Choose the spacing based on the bulb type and desired density (carpet vs. naturalized effect).
- 3Step 3: Calculate bulbs per square foot: 144 / spacing² (for square grid) or 1.15 × 144 / spacing² (for triangular/offset grid).
- 4Step 4: Multiply by planting area for total bulb count.
- 5Step 5: Add 10–15% extra for irregular edges, gaps, and any bulbs that fail to grow.
- 6Step 6: Plan planting depth: tulips 6–8 inches deep, daffodils 6–8 inches, crocus 3–4 inches, hyacinths 4–6 inches.
Bulbs per sq ft: 144/25 = 5.76. Total: 100 × 5.76 = 576. With 15% safety: 662 tulips. Buy in flat counts (50 or 100 per bag). Solid planting of single variety creates dramatic impact.
Bulbs per sq ft: 144/64 = 2.25. Total: 50 × 2.25 = 112. Mix 3–4 varieties with staggered bloom times for 6–8 week flower sequence. Naturalized daffodils spread over years and require no replanting.
Container area: π × 9² = 254 sq in = 1.76 sq ft. Bottom layer (deepest): 4 daffodils at 4-5 in apart. Middle layer: 3–4 tulips offset from daffodils. Top layer: 6–8 crocus. Early spring: crocus blooms first, then daffodils, then tulips — 6–8 weeks of continuous color from one pot.
Bulbs per sq ft: 144/36 = 4. Total: 600 × 4 = 2,400. Buy in case lots (250–500 bulbs) for significant cost savings — bulk daffodils cost $0.30–0.80 each vs. $1–2 each retail.
Portfolio managers at asset management firms use Flower Bulb Calc to project expected returns across different asset allocations, stress-test portfolios against historical market scenarios, and communicate performance expectations to institutional clients and pension fund trustees.
Individual investors and retirement planners apply Flower Bulb Calc to determine whether their current savings rate and investment returns will produce sufficient wealth to fund 25 to 30 years of retirement spending, accounting for inflation and required minimum distributions.
Venture capital and private equity firms use Flower Bulb Calc to calculate internal rates of return on fund investments, model exit scenarios for portfolio companies, and benchmark performance against industry standards like the Cambridge Associates index.
Financial advisors use Flower Bulb Calc during client reviews to illustrate the compounding benefit of starting early, the impact of fee drag on long-term wealth accumulation, and the trade-off between risk and expected return in diversified portfolios.
Negative or zero return periods
In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in flower bulb calculator calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.
Extremely long time horizons
In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in flower bulb calculator calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.
Lump sum versus periodic contributions
In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in flower bulb calculator calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.
| Bulb Type | Spacing | Depth | Bulbs per sq ft | Bloom Season |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tulip | 5–6 in | 6–8 in | 4–5 | Mid-late spring |
| Daffodil/Narcissus | 6–8 in | 6–8 in | 2–3 | Early-mid spring |
| Hyacinth | 6–7 in | 4–6 in | 3–4 | Mid spring |
| Crocus | 3–4 in | 3–4 in | 9–16 | Early spring |
| Allium (ornamental) | 6–12 in | 6–8 in | 1–4 | Late spring |
| Grape Hyacinth | 3–4 in | 3–4 in | 9–16 | Early spring |
| Dahlia | 12–18 in | 4–6 in | 0.5–1 | Summer |
| Gladiolus | 4–6 in | 4–6 in | 4–9 | Summer |
When should spring bulbs be planted?
Use Flower Bulb Calc whenever you need a reliable, reproducible calculation for decision-making, planning, comparison, or verification. Common triggers include evaluating a new opportunity, comparing two or more alternatives, checking whether a quoted figure is reasonable, preparing documentation that requires precise numbers, or monitoring changes over time. In professional settings, recalculating regularly — especially when key inputs change — ensures that decisions are based on current data rather than outdated estimates. Students should use the tool after attempting manual calculation to verify their understanding of the formula.
Do I need to dig up tulip bulbs every year?
Tulips in zones 3–7 can be left in the ground and will often re-bloom for 3–5 years, though bloom quality declines. In zones 8–10, tulips must be dug and refrigerator-chilled annually. Daffodils, crocus, and alliums naturalize and actually improve over years without lifting. Hyacinths typically give their best show in year 1 and decline thereafter.
What is the 'lasagna' bulb planting method?
Lasagna planting layers multiple bulb types at different depths in the same container or bed. Largest/deepest bulbs (daffodils, tulips) go at the bottom, medium bulbs (hyacinths) in the middle, and smallest (crocus, grape hyacinth) at the top. Each layer blooms in sequence from earliest to latest, providing months of continuous color from a single planting space.
Why didn't my bulbs come up this spring?
Common causes: planted too late (after ground froze), planted too shallow (eaten by squirrels, desiccated), rotted from poor drainage or disease, soil temperatures stayed above 60°F all winter, or the area received too much shade. Daffodils are usually the most reliable — squirrels leave them alone because they are toxic. Check if bulbs are firm (dormant) or mushy (rotted) when you dig to diagnose.
How do I deter squirrels from digging up bulbs?
Squirrels are a major frustration with tulip and crocus bulbs. Solutions: plant in chicken wire cages (make a basket of wire mesh, plant bulbs inside, bury), mulch 6 inches deep immediately after planting, plant squirrel-resistant bulbs (daffodils, alliums, snowdrops — all toxic or unpalatable), or use deer/squirrel repellent spray on the soil surface after planting.
What is the difference between perennial and annual bulbs?
True perennial bulbs (daffodils, alliums, crocus, grape hyacinth) naturalize and increase in number each year without replanting. Tulips are technically perennial but are often treated as annuals in zones 8+ because they decline significantly after year 2–3. Caladiums, dahlias, and gladioli are tender summer bulbs that must be dug and stored after frost in all but zones 9–11.
How far in advance should I order bulbs?
Order spring-flowering bulbs in June–July for fall delivery, or buy locally in September–October. Early ordering ensures the best variety selection — popular varieties sell out by September. Order fall-blooming bulbs (colchicum, autumn crocus) in July–August for immediate planting. Summer-blooming tender bulbs (dahlias, gladioli, caladiums) are ordered in late winter for spring planting.
Совет профессионала
Order bulbs in July–August for the widest variety selection and best prices — the best named varieties sell out months before fall planting season. Store bulbs in a cool, dry, dark, well-ventilated location (mesh bags in a garage or shed) until planting time in October–November.
Знаете ли вы?
The Netherlands produces approximately 4.3 billion flower bulbs annually, representing 50% of global bulb production. The famous Dutch tulip mania of 1636–1637 was one of the first recorded speculative economic bubbles — a single Semper Augustus tulip bulb sold for the equivalent of a luxury Amsterdam canal house (roughly $200,000 in today's value). The crash was so severe that the Dutch government had to cancel all tulip futures contracts.