Groupings
of single varieties of green feathered viridiflora
tulips, are very dramatic. ‘Spring
Green’, which is white with green streaks, is especially striking.
Double tulips, with their large, many-petaled flowerheads, also have impact.
Early in the season, ‘Monsella’
compensates for its relatively short stature with a dramatic display of
red-flamed yellow petals. ‘Sunset
Tropical’ smolders in deep rosy pink. A large clump can stop
garden visitors in their tracks.
Sometimes
tulips
that are relatively subtle by themselves become distinctive in combination
with others. The easiest way to achieve good combinations is to pick contrasting
flower colors within the same tulip
category—for example two contrasting lily-flowered
varieties or three contrasting single
late tulips.
Almost any
combination of yellow, red and orange tulips
brings heat and impact to the spring landscape. Tall, dark and handsome,
‘Queen
of the Night’ contrasts dramatically with the white-flowered
‘Maureen’.
Plant large numbers of both these single
late-flowering tulips for maximum effect. Another great combination
is the white fringed tulip ‘Swan
Wings’, with another fringed
variety, ‘Burgundy
Lace’. Both are tall and bloom in mid to late spring. The beautiful
deep yellow Triumph
tulip ‘Ambassador Yellow’ makes a wonderful foil for the
dark maroon and white ‘Fontaine
Bleu’ for a memorable mid-season show. ‘Orange
Princess', a double
late variety, finds a stunning consort in ‘Black
Hero’.
With so
many tulip varieties available, it isn’t hard to find tulips
with impact. And when those tulips
bloom in the spring, it’s easy to see why seventeenth century speculators
risked fortunes to obtain them.
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About Elisabeth Ginsburg: Born into a gardening family, Elisabeth grew her first plants—a healthy stand of hollyhocks—as a child. Her experiences range from container gardening on a Missouri balcony to mixed borders in the New Jersey suburbs and vacation gardening in Central New York State.
She has studied gardening at the New York Botanical garden and elsewhere and has also written about gardens, landscape history and ecology for years in publications including the New York Times Sunday “Cuttings” column, the Times Regional Weeklies, Garden Design, Flower & Garden and New Jersey Lifestyle. Her “Gardener’s Apprentice” weekly column appears in several papers belonging to the Worrall chain of suburban northern and central New Jersey weekly newspapers. She shares her garden with her husband, teenaged daughter and two feline “garden supervisors.”
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