
Did you know that your bulb garden doesn't have to be high-maintenance? One of my earliest memories is my mom planting what felt like endless tulip bulbs—500 of them, in fact. She was a young mom with three kids, no spare time, and definitely not a person who could fuss over plants every day, but somehow, she always had color! Bulbs showed up for her, and she did not have to slave over her garden to get them. That’s why I know it is possible to create a low‑maintenance garden with bulbs. So I invited Jenny Rose Carey on the show to walk us through it. She gardens on a 4.5‑acre property called Northview, filled with thousands of bulbs that bloom from late winter through fall. She’s a horticulturist, a biologist, a teacher at heart, and the author of The Essential Guide to Bulbs. She shares how bulbs actually work, which ones are worth planting, and how to plant them so they don’t rot or disappear after one season! Let's begin!
Growing Joy: The Plant Lover's Guide to Cultivating Happiness (and Plants) by Maria Failla, Illustrated by Samantha Leung
Most gardeners, myself included, use the word “bulb” pretty loosely. Technically, not all “bulbs” are true bulbs, and if you hang out with other gardeners, they’ll happily tell you the difference.
Some plants grow from:
And then you’ve got your true bulbs, like tulips and daffodils.
Jenny’s take is that we do not need to get hung up on these terms if we’re just trying to grow a pretty garden. Gardeners “just call them all bulbs” and move on with their lives.
What actually matters is what they do, not what they’re called. Every single one of these “underground storage organs” is designed to store energy under the soil so the plant can survive when life above ground isn’t great.
When the weather turns bad, they simply:
Later, when conditions change and the plant decides it’s “go time” again, it wakes up, pushes through the soil, sends up leaves, and then flowers.
So in practice, the basic story is the same: energy goes down, plant disappears, plant comes back.
I realized that bulbs are all about timing, and they’re built to match the seasons, which means the planting and blooming times don’t line up the way we expect.
The main thing with bulbs is that you usually don’t plant them in the same season they bloom. That’s the part that confuses almost everyone at first.
So when we say “spring bulb” or “summer bulb,” we’re talking about when it blooms, and not when you stick it in the ground.
Spring bulbs (tulips, daffodils, hyacinths, crocus)
Summer bulbs (dahlias, gladioli, cannas, caladiums, lilies)
Jenny’s rule of thumb for summer bulbs is if you walk outside and feel like you could sit on the ground, day or night, and feel comfortable, that’s when you can safely put your summer bulbs out.
In her Mid‑Atlantic climate, that lands around Mother’s Day. Though if you’re further south, you’ll probably be out there earlier.
Note: With spring bulbs, resist the urge to tidy too soon. Let the leaves get ugly and die back on their own after blooming, because that messy foliage is how the bulb “refuels” for next year.
I thought planting bulbs meant I needed an auger, a big drill, and some complicated setup.
But Jenny just uses a soil knife for the smaller bulbs and a regular shovel for bigger ones.
Her rule: pointy end up.
If your bulb has a visible tip, that pointed part goes toward the sky, and the rounded, rooty side goes down.
For anemones, where you really can’t tell which side is which, you can just lay them on their side and cover them. They’ll sort themselves out underground.
Plant bulbs about 2 to 3 times as deep as the bulb is tall.
Roughly, that shakes out to:
Going deeper actually helps protect bulbs from wild temperature swings and from drying out too quickly at the soil surface.
Instead of digging a hundred tiny individual holes, Jenny suggested digging one larger hole and arranging a group of bulbs inside it.
I’ve made a few of these myself, so if you read this list and recognize yourself, please know you are in very good company.
We tend to focus on color and shape, but some bulbs also smell incredible, and if you plant them near a path or a door you use every day, they quietly turn those spots into little sensory rituals.
A few of Jenny’s favorite fragrant bulbs:
They’re beautiful to look at, but they also make the air around them richer, which is such an easy way to make your space feel special.
Bulbs are one of the simplest ways to have a garden that looks gorgeous, feels intentional, and doesn’t eat up your entire weekend. You plant them at roughly the right time, at roughly the right depth, give them water, add a little fertilizer now and then, and then you mostly just wait and enjoy.
They’re doing the complicated part underground, so you don’t have to. I hope that encourages you a little more to grow your own bulbs!
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