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Lady Tulip (Tulipa clusiana)

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Lady Tulip (Tulipa clusiana)

Hardy, mid-spring flowering bulb
Description: Small, ivory white petals with a pink, central stripe, suggestive of peppermint sticks
Habit: 6 to 12 inches high
Culture: Plant bulbs 3 to 4 inches deep in a sunny, well-drained location; can be naturalized
Hardiness: USDA Zones 4 through 10.

10 bulbs per bag.

Charles de l'Ecluse, also known as Clusius, a botany professor at Leiden, was largely responsible for the introduction of tulips from Turkey to Europe beginning around 1570. The Lady Tulip was later named for him, to honor his contributions to botany and horticulture. This bulb, a native of Asia Minor, grew in English gardens by 1636, and made its way to the New World shortly thereafter. A story persists that when the Monticello flower gardens were restored by the Garden Club of Virginia in 1941, Lady Tulips were brought from Edgehill, a nearby estate and former home of Thomas Jefferson'’s daughter Martha. These bulbs were planted at Monticello, where they have thrived and still flower in mid-April.
zone4,zone5,zone6,zone7,zone8,zone9,zone0

$2.80

Original: $8.00

-65%
Lady Tulip (Tulipa clusiana)

$8.00

$2.80

Product Information

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Description

Hardy, mid-spring flowering bulb
Description: Small, ivory white petals with a pink, central stripe, suggestive of peppermint sticks
Habit: 6 to 12 inches high
Culture: Plant bulbs 3 to 4 inches deep in a sunny, well-drained location; can be naturalized
Hardiness: USDA Zones 4 through 10.

10 bulbs per bag.

Charles de l'Ecluse, also known as Clusius, a botany professor at Leiden, was largely responsible for the introduction of tulips from Turkey to Europe beginning around 1570. The Lady Tulip was later named for him, to honor his contributions to botany and horticulture. This bulb, a native of Asia Minor, grew in English gardens by 1636, and made its way to the New World shortly thereafter. A story persists that when the Monticello flower gardens were restored by the Garden Club of Virginia in 1941, Lady Tulips were brought from Edgehill, a nearby estate and former home of Thomas Jefferson'’s daughter Martha. These bulbs were planted at Monticello, where they have thrived and still flower in mid-April.
zone4,zone5,zone6,zone7,zone8,zone9,zone0

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