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How to Identify Bulbs

As gardening has increased in popularity, some gardeners have taken for granted the old-fashioned pictorial chart showing how to plant bulbs. One of the nicest conveniences of that chart was the drawings of bulbs attached to the blooming flowers they can produce. We'll never know how many instant experts that now hard-to-find chart created. There is a link in the Resources section to a copy of the chart that you can tape to your garage wall. Use pictures and the verbal descriptions that now meet the needs of more experienced and more adventuresome gardeners to identify old bulbs in your yard or new ones in the bargain bin.

Things You'll Need

  • Old newspapers
  • Pictorial chart and verbal descriptions
  • Small brown paper lunch bags
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Instructions

  1. Sorting Strategies and Terms

    • 1

      Lay out all the bulbs you're trying to identify on a newspaper or flat surface. Remove any bulbs with the following characteristics: soaking wet and squashy; leaking liquids; the same dark brown color all the way through; or cut in pieces. Throw them away, as they're very likely to be too damaged to grow any more.

    • 2

      Sort bulbs by both shape and size. Shapes tend to include: tear-drop; flattened-ball; round at the bottom with two or more similar-sized points at the top; egg-shaped; or heavily pointed, like lumpy cow horns. Sizes can run from the size of your thumbnail to larger than a golf ball.

    • 3

      Make separate piles of bulbs shaped like bunches of carrots or flattened round couch cushions. The carrot-shaped clusters are technically tubers; the couch cushions are corms. For sorting and planting purposes, however, corms and tubers qualify as bulbs. Bulbs are self-contained plant factories, needing very little help to grow to a mature plant.

    Making Specific Identifications

    • 4

      Divide tear-drop-shaped, golf ball-sized bulbs into two piles, depending on their outer paper-like skin. Those bulbs with a single sheet of smooth brown skin are tulips. Those with several layers of purple, reddish, bluish or cream-color papery skin are hyacinths. A hint with hyacinths: sometimes the outer layers give you a clue about the bloom color--and sometimes they don't. If you still have teardrops left with several layers of papery tan-to-brown skin, separate them for now.

    • 5

      Make piles of your other large, ball-sized, bulbs. Your biggest teardrops are likely to be one of two kinds. Big, big bulbs are probably Fritillary or Crown Imperial. Big bulbs that smell like onions will likely be Decorative Alliums, which smell like onions because they belong to the onion family.

    • 6

      Put middle-sized teardrops and bulbs shaped like lumpy cow-horns together. They should have in common several layers of papery tan-to-brown skin--the overlapping of layers is most visible at the pointy end. Bulbs with two or more points are said to have double or triple noses. With one, two or more noses, these bulbs are daffodils. Each nose contains a leaf-and-flower sprout. When the noses reach golf ball size, separate them gently, making sure each nose has a few roots. This is how daffodils reproduce. You have just turned one plant into many.

    • 7

      Separate small bulbs into piles. Since many are very close to the same size, sort them by the quality of their covering skin. As you look closely, you'll notice that some coverings are heavily grooved, very smooth or extremely thin. When you're sorting large quantities of mixed, small, early spring bulbs, sorting is further confused by mature vs. immature sizes and the complete absence of covering on some bulbs. Use your pictures and charts to clarify what is what, and plan a little replanting after blooming.