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posted
I purchase some red crocosmia bulbs yesterday on the package it states "cold Hardiness -30 to -40F so I thought wonderful do not have to dig them up. However when I looked on the net to find out more info on them it talks about digging them up?? I'm in zone 5, my question is can I leave them in the ground? Where I plant them depends on the answer. Thanks for your input. Enjoy looking at all your beautiful gardens, mine is coming but has a way to go. Patty louise- just love your garden and home!!!
 
Posts: 356 | Registered: May 26, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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I looked up the temperature range for Crocosmia bulbs in my Sunset Gardening book. This is what is says:

Put in well-drained soil; set corms 2in. deep, 3in. apart. Where winter temperatures remain above 10 degrees F/-12 degrees C, needs no winter protection. Where low range from 10 to -5 degrees F/12 to - 21 degrees C provide winter mulch. In colder areas, dig and store over winter.
 
Posts: 2489 | Registered: Jan 08, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of jvelo
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I'm in zone 5 and they don't reliably come back. I've tried a few times in 2 different locations. This year just a couple spikes, I guess because it was a little warmer than usual this winter.
 
Posts: 3212 | Location: Putnam County, NY z5 | Registered: Jun 30, 2004Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Thanks!!! Guess I'm in for digging up in the fall but that ok.
 
Posts: 356 | Registered: May 26, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of thebrownthumb
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I live in zone6...pretty cold here in PA in the winter...I planted mine 4 inches deep and they come up every year.


There are no gardening mistakes, only experiments. Janet Kilburn Phillips
 
Posts: 4133 | Location: Central PA | Registered: Sep 04, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Thanks brownthumb maybe I will leave a couple of bulbs in the ground over the winter and see what happens. That way I won't lose all of them if it doesn't work. Last year I must have missed a glad bulb and because of the mild winter it came up this spring!
 
Posts: 356 | Registered: May 26, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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I've always heard that the extent of their range is zone 6. Even though we have been classified as 6 now I'm a bit leery of buying them. However, I do see them in garden centers here now. In the past, they would sell them with a caution that they were not cold hardy in my area.
 
Posts: 2569 | Location: Ohio | Registered: Feb 25, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of ga.karen
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You gals can try this if you want...
back in central Ill. I got tired of digging up my glad bulbs every fall. Soooo, I left them in the ground & put straw bales on top of them. Took the bales off after frost danger was gone & they all came back & grew fine! So if you can get square straw bales...you could do that & then use the straw for mulch in some beds next spring??? Or if it is still in good condition...save it in a sheltered place for use a second winter.


"The soil is the source of life, creativity, culture and real independence." David Ben-Gurion
 
Posts: 2957 | Location: SW Ga. 8a/b | Registered: Apr 21, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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