Old House Gardens
From America’s Expert Source for Heirloom Flower Bulbs
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Lycoris squamigera, SURPRISE LILY OR MAGIC LILY, 1889
In late summer, bare stalks rocket up out of nowhere, opening into shimmering, lavender-pink, amaryllis-like flowers. Also known as naked ladies and resurrection lily, this Asian wildflower is “nearly ideal for the middle and upper South,” Scott Ogden writes in Garden Bulbs for the South — and it blooms here in chilly zone-6 Ann Arbor, too, if you can give it a sunny site with sandy soil that stays relatively dry in summer. 3 feet, zones 6-7bS/8WC, from Holland. Please note: Surprise lilies ship in October, as do all of our Fall-Planted Diverse bulbs. Chart to compare.
DI14Add to basket:1/$8.753/$245/$37.5010/$7025/$158
Muscari botryoides, ORIGINAL GRAPE HYACINTH, 1576
For 400 years this was the grape hyacinth, but today it has all but disappeared from the bulb trade, shoved aside by the modern M. armeniacum. What a loss! It’s cold-hardier and brighter blue than armeniacum, much more vigorous than the wimpy white form ‘Album’, and its leaves are upright and blissfully sprawl-free. 6-8 inches, zones 3-7S/9WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
DI15Add to basket:5/$6.7510/$12.5025/$2950/$54100/$100
Muscari neglectum, SOUTHERN GRAPE HYACINTH, 1629
Dark, midnight-blue starch hyacinths or blue bottles have made themselves at home in sunny gardens and shady lawns throughout the South for generations — and they do equally well up north! 6-10 inches, zones 5-8S/9WC. Chart to compare.
DI18Add to basket:5/$7.5010/$1425/$32.5050/$60100/$111
Ornithogalum nutans, SILVER BELLS, 1629
We love these subtle, Quakerish bells of silver and sage that have been grown since colonial days. They thrive in light shade, bloom in late spring, and are much too rarely seen today. They’re cheap, too — so why not take a small leap and try somthing new? 8-12 inches, zones 5b-8S/8WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
DI34Add to basket:10/$7.5025/$17.5050/$32.50100/$60250/$135
Rhodophiala bifida, OXBLOOD LILY, 1807
Also called hurricane and schoolhouse lilies, these brilliant heirlooms look like short, blood-red amaryllises. Extra tough, they thrive in clay or sand and often mark abandoned homesites. They were introduced from the Andes in 1807 and brought to Texas by German settlers sometime after 1865. By 1881 they were being offered by the Lily Nursery of Jacksonville, Florida. Formerly Amaryllis advena, Habranthus hesperius, and Hippeastrum advenum, 12-18 inches, zones 7-10, from Texas. Chart to compare.
DI19Add to basket:3/$15.505/$24.5010/$4625/$104.5050/$194
Scilla siberica, SIBERIAN SQUILL, 1796
Vast pools of this true blue wildling spangle many old neighborhoods in very early spring, spreading without care under shrubs and into the lawn in light shade. Grown in America by 1830, its heyday was the early 1900s when one writer recommended planting “hundreds and thousands in every garden.” We’d be happy to help you with that! 4-6 inches, zones 3-7S/9WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
DI20Add to basket:10/$5.2525/$1250/$22.50100/$42250/$95
Sternbergia lutea, STERNBERGIA, 1596        New
“Perhaps the best of fall-flowering bulbs,” writes John Bryan in his encyclopedic Bulbs. Though often called fall daffodil, sternbergia looks like a big, happy, lemon-yellow crocus. It thrives (and can self-sow) in sunny sites that are dryish in summer and not too harsh in winter. (Learn more.) Though grown since colonial days and “once plentiful” according to Elizabeth Lawrence, by 1942 they were “so neglected they disappeared from all but a few” old gardens. Isn’t it time for a renaissance? 6-9 inches, zones 6-9S/10WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
DI48Add to basket:3/$11.505/$18.5010/$3425/$77.5050/$144

Galanthus elwesii, GIANT or ELWES SNOWDROP – Plant ASAP when you receive them in October. The naturally small bulbs of Galanthus can dry out and die very quickly in storage (Despite modern folklore, however, planting “in the green” is not essential for success).

Choose a lightly shaded site with well-drained or average garden soil that never gets bone-dry in summer. Though G. elwesii can do well alongside the more common G. nivalis, it actually prefers less shade, less moisture, and better drained soil than G. nivalis (as well as warmer temperatures).

Plant 3”-4” deep and 2”-4” apart. Consider protecting with plastic netting, chicken-wire, etc., for a few weeks after planting, typically the only time critters bother these animal-resistant little bulbs. Water well, and then assure even moisture in spring and fall.

Do not mulch. Mulch is often too thick or heavy for small bulbs such as snowdrops and their growth will suffer – if they emerge at all.

After bloom, allow seedpods to ripen and scatter their seeds, and allow the foliage to yellow and wither away naturally to feed the bulbs. Fertilizing is rarely necessary. Over time your bulbs will multiply and spread into large colonies.

Galanthus nivalis, TRADITIONAL SNOWDROP – Plant ASAP when you receive them in October. The naturally small bulbs of Galanthus can dry out and die very quickly in storage. (However, despite modern folklore, planting “in the green” is not essential for success.)

Choose a lightly shaded site with well-drained or average garden soil that never gets bone-dry or overly hot in summer. Galanthus do best with more moisture than most bulbs, and they can even thrive in clay soil.

Plant 2”-4” deep and 2”-4” apart. Consider protecting with plastic netting, chicken-wire, etc., for a few weeks after planting, typically the only time critters bother these animal-resistant little bulbs. Water well, and then assure even moisture in spring and fall.

Do not mulch. Mulch is often too thick or heavy for small bulbs such as snowdrops and their growth will suffer – if they emerge at all.

After bloom, allow seedpods to ripen and scatter their seeds, and allow the foliage to yellow and wither away naturally to feed the bulbs. Fertilizing is rarely necessary. Over time your bulbs will multiply and spread into large colonies.


Hyacinthoides hispanica, ‘EXCELSIOR’ SPANISH BLUEBELL – Plant ASAP when you receive them in October. Hyacinthoides bulbs are very perishable.

Choose a site in sun to part shade (some shade is best in the South). Though Spanish bluebells prefer rich, moist, woodland soils, they are very adaptable and will thrive in ordinary garden soil. In fact, they’ll grow just about anywhere – and they’re widely animal-resistant! Plant with bases 4”-5” deep and 4”-6” apart from center to center. Water well.

After bloom in late spring, allow seed-heads to ripen and scatter their seeds and allow the foliage to yellow completely to feed the bulbs before removing. Bulbs often multiply rapidly, and within a few years clumps may be dug, divided, and replanted immediately after flowering.

Hyacinthoides make a long-lasting cut flower. Cut or snap off stems rather than pulling them which can damage the bulbs.

Hyacinthoides non-scripta, ENGLISH BLUEBELL – Plant ASAP when you receive them in October. Hyacinthoides bulbs are very perishable.

Englishman Roy Genders writes that bluebells are “happiest beneath mature trees where they enjoy partial shade and damp humus-laden soil.” Choose a site accordingly (though the mature trees are not essential). Plant about 3” deep, about 6” apart from center to center. Water well, and assure even moisture from fall through spring.

After bloom in late spring, allow foliage to yellow and seed-heads to ripen and scatter their seeds – unless Spanish bluebells are nearby, in which case you will get mongrel offspring that will eventually crowd out your true English bluebells.

Though challenging to establish outside of mild, English-like climates, in the right spot true English bluebells will multiply happily and may be dug, divided, and replanted right after flowering. They make fragrant, long-lasting cut flowers. Cut or snap off stems rather than pulling them which can damage the bulbs.


Lycoris radiata, RED SPIDER LILY – Choose a site that’s sunny or – in the South – partially shaded. Red spider lily is highly adaptable but often does best in loose, well-drained, acidic soil.

Plant in the fall so that the neck of the bulb is just an inch or so beneath the surface, or about 5”-6” to the base of the bulb, and about 6” apart from center to center. Scratch a tablespoon of bulb fertilizer into the surface soil; slow-release 10-10-10 is ideal. Water well.

Leaves will emerge the first fall and will need protection over the winter when temperatures dip below 20 F. They will yellow and go dormant next summer.

Flowers will appear the following fall – or even the year after. Please be patient. Though our bulbs are all blooming-size and freshly harvested by our Texas grower, Lycoris always resent transplanting and storage and are naturally slow to re-establish themselves and bloom again. Once settled in, though, they will multiply and increase in beauty year after year.

Lycoris squamigera, SURPRISE or MAGIC LILY – Choose a sunny to lightly shaded site that you can keep relatively dry in summer. Surprise lilies bloom best when given a dry resting period after their foliage withers in early summer. (This may be why they are often seen in low-maintenance lawns – or are they simply the only survivors of earlier flower beds that have been grassed-over?)

Plant so the neck is just below the soil line, or about 5” deep to the base of the bulbs, and about 6” apart center to center. Water well. Their first winter in colder zones, protect with a thick but airy mulch (straw, oak leaves, etc.).

Leaves emerge in the spring, looking like those of giant daffodils. They eventually mature and fade and the plant goes dormant for six to ten weeks before the flowers burst forth in late summer.

Lycoris resent transplanting and are slow to re-establish themselves. Don’t be surprised if they don’t bloom till the second fall after planting. This is common (unless a neighbor has given you a freshly dug shovelfull). We hope you’ll be patient with Mother Nature!


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