Bulbs

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Plant once and they come back for years — tulips, daffodils, lilies and more, turning a single afternoon of digging into wave after wave of color from late winter through summer.

Guarantee
30-day plant guarantee
Shipping
USPS & FedEx · all 48 states
Sourcing
Partner nurseries nationwide
Based in
York, SC
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About Bulbs

A bulb is a flower that plants itself ahead of time. Inside each papery shell is a fully formed bloom waiting for its cue — all you do is tuck it in the soil and let the seasons do the rest. Tulips and daffodils open the year, alliums and Dutch iris carry the spring, and lilies, dahlias and gladiolus stretch the show deep into summer. Plant a handful in an hour and you've set up months of color.

Why gardeners keep coming back to bulbs. They're some of the most forgiving plants there is — no seed-starting, no fuss, just reliable bloom from a package that already holds everything the flower needs. Many are perennial: daffodils, alliums and most lilies return and multiply on their own, so one planting rewards you for years. Others, like showstopping tulips and tender dahlias, are worth replanting just for the spectacle.

What's in this collection

From classic and parrot tulips to fragrant daffodils, statuesque Oriental and Asiatic lilies, globe-shaped alliums, and bold summer dahlias and glads, this collection gathers the bulbs worth growing — in a range of colors, heights and bloom times you can layer for a garden that's never empty.

Timing is the only real trick. Spring bloomers (tulips, daffodils, alliums) go in during fall so winter chill can set the bloom; summer bloomers (lilies, dahlias, gladiolus) plant after the last frost. Give them well-drained soil and a sunny spot, plant pointy-end up at about three times their height, and they take it from there.

Shipped to arrive healthy. Every bulb is grown in our nursery network, inspected, and hand-packed in protective, season-aware packaging — and we honor the state-by-state agricultural rules that govern where bulbs can ship.

Common questions

  • When should I plant my bulbs?

    It depends on when they bloom. Spring-flowering bulbs like tulips, daffodils and alliums go in the ground in fall, before it freezes, so the winter cold can trigger the bloom. Summer bloomers like lilies, dahlias and gladiolus are planted in spring after the last frost.

  • Will my bulbs come back every year?

    Many will. Daffodils, alliums and most lilies are reliably perennial and often multiply over time. Tulips can return but tend to fade after a season or two, and tender summer bulbs like dahlias need to be dug up and stored over winter in colder zones.

  • Which way is up when I plant a bulb?

    Plant pointed-end up, roots or flat base down, at a depth of about three times the bulb's height. If you genuinely can't tell which end is which, plant it on its side and the shoot will find its way to the surface.

  • Do bulbs need full sun?

    Most do best with at least six hours of direct sun, though many spring bulbs bloom before the trees leaf out, so a spot that's sunny in early spring works even under deciduous shade. Lilies and dahlias want steady, full-day light to flower their best.

  • Which states can bulbs ship to?

    Some bulbs carry agricultural shipping restrictions that vary by state. Those rules are built into fulfillment, so bulbs are only sent where they're allowed.

Still have questions?Call (803) 610-1386or email info@livegoodlogistics.com