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Due to high order volumes in our warehouse, please note that any new orders will not ship until after Thanksgiving. Your order confirmation will indicate a 7-10 business day shipping timeframe from the processing date, but please expect delays. Thank you for your patience and understanding during this busy season!

We’re blooming with orders! 🌸 Although your acknowledgment shows 7–10 business days, shipping is currently taking 10–12 business days from the process date. Thank you for your patience and support!

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July 17, 2019

Companion Planting with Bulbs

the bulb blog brent & becky's

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Companion Planting with Bulbs

 By: Brent Heath, Co-owner, Brent & Becky’s

Right now in the garden, there are so many wonderful combinations of bulbs, perennials, and annuals that are just spectacular planted together—not just because they work well together visually, but also for the companion relationships they provide! Typically, different plants of different genera have somewhat different requirements and, when planted together in the same bed, those differences can often benefit each other!

The Benefits of Companion Planting with Bulbs

Now, combinations are fun because you get two things that bloom at a similar time that contrast or complement each other quite nicely. But also, two different plant families don’t always attract the same sorts of pests and diseases! So, by planting them together, you can reap the rewards of the companion plant’s protection, often leaving you with a healthier planting.

Spring-flowering bulbs are typically storage organs that hold starches and sugars produced by the “solar collectors” (the leaves) when weather is optimal in spring with good light, plenty of moisture, and cool temperatures. However, once the “solar collectors” have recharged the “batteries” (the bulbs)—usually around 8 weeks after bloom—they tend to go dormant in the heat of the summer and prefer to sleep in a dry bed, like you and I. So, when they’re dormant, they don’t want to be planted where they have mindless irrigation pouring water on them, but they’re very happy in bed with perennials, annuals, groundcovers, trees, and shrubs, who are actively growing during the summer and using the natural available moisture, helping them to stay dry when they’re dormant!

When we look at the summer-flowering bulbs, they are actually another great choice to be planted right on top of and among the spring-flowering bulbs. They, too, provide that same function that the perennials, annuals, and shrubs do for the spring-flowering bulbs, helping to consume the moisture and keep things nice and dry.

But they also work well just in terms of complimenting perennials throughout the summer, too. For example, right now in my own garden, I have a wonderful South African bulb called Galtonia—also nicknamed the summer Hyacinth, with white pendant flowers and attractive leaves on a 2-foot bloom stalk—blooming right in a bed of the Phlox Jeana, which I really like because it blooms all summer and attracts all the pollinators. And, overall, it’s a smashing combination! The two seem quite happy in bed together, and they share it quite nicely.

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Companion Planting with Lilies

Lilies are my second favorite bulbs (Daffodils being my first), and I’ve got a lot of them in my garden, but they come with a risk. While deer don’t like certain plants and avoid them, others they are drawn to, like Lilies. At first, I thought roses would be ideal to plant them with for protection, but the deer don’t seem to mind thorns. Instead, I’ve begun planting my Lilies with ornamental grasses! These grasses are not attractive to deer and offer a great companion for protecting my Lilies. Just remember, ornamental grasses have relatively shallow root systems, so plant the Lilies first and plug in the grasses later.

Lilies also work incredibly well in beds of small shrubs, too. They need lots of sun on their leaves, but also need their roots to stay cool, which can be quite hard to give them in a sunny bed. However, among shrubs, they are still able to come up through foliage to get the light they need, but the shrub will keep the ground shaded and their roots nice and cool!

Companion Planting with Caladiums

Another fun summer one is the wonderful Caladium, which maybe those living in a bit of a cooler climate might struggle with. Caladiums are the most tropical of all the bulbs, and they need warm soil. They also prefer being in the shade or part shade. So, they benefit from being in the shade of shrubs and small trees. Crepe myrtles are particularly ideal because you’ll get the color up above and this wonderful, shade-tolerant plant underneath, so you get the shoes, the socks, the pants, and the shirt all together in the same picture!

Companion Planting with Dahlias

Dahlias, in areas with cooler summer nights, probably bloom all summer. Here, though, we find Dahlias bloom better in May and June and then taper off in July, although they are still in bloom and, with enough moisture, they’ll keep blooming (they just won’t be making a big, wild show). But when the nights begin to cool in September, they go to town again! They are spectacular, great for pollinators in fall, and they are perennial here, but only when we put them in bed with very good drainage and a perennial or groundcover that uses up the winter moisture because they like to sleep in a dry bed in the wintertime.

Companion Planting with Gladiolas

The majority of bulbs produced are considered cut flower bulbs or bulbs for pots, and we gardeners just use 20% of them. And since Gladiolas are inexpensive, they tend to be used extensively in funeral arrangements, giving people the misconception that they are “funeral flowers”. But did you know they have every color in the rainbow? (Well, I think they do, but my friend Joseph contends there are no true blues. But color is a personal perception, we each have a different idea of color, so I stand by it!)

Most plants we have in a garden are more mounding, and it’s quite nice to break that mound with a nice, upright plant. Gladiolas have a wonderful linear form, working as a sword or saber in an otherwise flat garden. Often, though, they tend to be top-heavy because they have so darn many flowers that they topple over. Well, here’s a companion relationship that works for them: Glads planted where they can come up through a strong perennial or shrub will have a helping hand—or, rather, branch—to keep them upright!

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Companion Planting with Eucomis

Another neat summer bulb is the Eucomis. It is a superb living flower arrangement plant, but it even looks great just in a container arrangement. It works as a fantastic centerpiece with its upright spike and the cute tuft of leaves on top, earning it the nickname “pineapple lily”, but it not just for one season! In bud, it’s simply beautiful, and it is superb in flower, lasting a long time. Once the flower is gone, though, the Calyx is just as pretty, giving you an interesting centrepiece in container or living arrangement all season long!

Companion Planting with Oxalis

Oxalis is extremely shade-tolerant and hardy for us here in Virginia (although, for years I thought it was a houseplant until we accidentally left it out after the summer and discovered it was perfectly hardy). They work great when paired with other shade-lovers, like Caladiums, but they also look fantastic with a flowing grass, like a Carex. They provide an excellent socks and shoes effect for really any shade-loving plant, making them a spectacular companion all around.

While we love the visual effects that planting different genera together can provide, one thing we love even more is when they benefit each other in other ways, too! So I encourage you to try mixing and matching in your garden this season and see what helpful discoveries you can find. You may just find a winning combination!

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Celebrating 125 Years Together

Thank you for being part of our journey.

For 125 years, we’ve had the privilege of serving you—our valued customers. What began as a simple catalog has grown into a cherished tradition, connecting generations through quality, service, and trust.

This milestone wouldn’t have been possible without your loyalty and support. As we celebrate this remarkable anniversary, we’re reminded that you are at the heart of everything we do.

Here’s to the past, the present, and a future filled with possibilities—together.

With gratitude,
Brent and Becky, Jay and Denise and the entire staff

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Pollinator friendly plants, may include butterflies, bees, hummingbirds, beneficial insects and more!
Long bloom time
Resistant to critters, may include deer, rabbits, voles, etc.
Those items that are known to be inedible to critters
Drought tolerant once established
Full sun
Part sun
Shade
Fragrant flowers and/or foliage
New item for this season
A favorite of Brent and Becky’s as it has consistently performed well in the gardens year after year
Available again this season after being gone for a while
Denotes an item that is shipped as a plant in a 4″ pot and may have extra shipping charges
Indicates any items that have special cultural requirements. We will send cultural instructions with your order so you will know how to properly plant and take care of all of the items you have purchased.
Has been awarded the Wister Award.
Have been awarded the Pannill Award.
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Additional shipping charges for orders sent to locations West of the Rocky Mountains after Oct. 25th.  Orders shipped West of the Rocky Mountains after Oct. 25th have a possibility of freezing in transit.  In order to eliminate that possibility, 3rd Day Shipping is required.  This chart shows how much extra shipping will be added to your if the order is being sent after Oct. 25th.  Please note that the charges are determined first by the state and then by the number of bulbs being ordered.  Please check the chart to determine if you will be charged an additional amount.  For example:  Select the state where the bulbs will be shipped (i.e. CA).  Count the number of  bulbs being ordered (100  daffodils, 100 tulips, 100 crocus and 10 hippeastrum would equal 310 bulbs).  The additional shipping charge for 310  bulbs to CA after Oct. 25th would equal $49.00. 

Any shipments being sent to AK or HI are charged actual cost of UPS or FDX 2nd Day Air; $15 minimum.  This cost is unknown until after the order has shipped.

State300 TO 499 Bulbs500+Bulbs
AKcost after shipmentcost after shipment
AZ$49.00cost after shipment
CA$50.00cost after shipment
HIcost after shipmentcost after shipment
ID$49.00cost after shipment
MT$49.00cost after shipment
NV$49.00cost after shipment
NM$45.00cost after shipment
ND$45.00cost after shipment
OR$50.00cost after shipment
SD$45.00cost after shipment
UT$49.00cost after shipment
WA$50.00cost after shipment

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Live Plant Shipping Information:  Live plants require special shipping status to make it from us to you in good condition.  All plants must be shipped 3rd Day Select by UPS or FedEx to ensure that they are ready to go into your garden when you receive them.  This chart shows how much extra shipping will be added to your order when ordering live plants.  Any shipments being sent to AK or HI are charged actual cost of UPS/FedEX 2nd Day Air: $15 minimum.  This cost is unknown until after the order has shipped.

Example for calculating shipping:  Select the state we will be shipping to, ie. CA;  count the quantity of plants you are ordering, ie, 4; the additional shipping charge for 4 plants being shipped to CA would equal $15.00.

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AZ$6.50$14.00$24.00
CA$7.00$15.00$25.00
CO$6.50$14.00$24.00
HIcost after shipmentcost after shipmentcost after shipment
ID$6.50$14.00$24.00
MT$6.00$12.50$22.00
NE$7.00$15.00$25.00
NV$6.50$14.00$24.00
NM$6.50$14.00$24.00
ND$5.50$12.00$21.00
OR$6.50$14.00$24.00
SD$7.00$15.00$25.00
UT$6.50$14.00$24.00
WA$7.00$15.00$25.00
WY$6.50$14.00$24.00
PUERTO RICO$7.00$15.00$25.00

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