Any flower that is white will absorb the color you choose. You see that often with carnations. They are dyed blue alot. I have found nothing on-line that shows this. I did see one reference where a virus was injected into the bulb to change the flower color but on the second year flowering it reverted back to the original color. You can however dye some white cut flowers by putting into colored water. The dye is absorbed through the stem and into the flower.
Tulip
no, the bulb its self is bigger than that
Nearly half the length of its shoot
well the tulips petals dry up and they will eventually turn into a bulb
The bulb has grown from a tulip seed. Seeds develop at the base of the tulip flower. It takes 5-7 years for a tulip seed to grow into a bulb and produce the stem, leaves, and flower. The bulb stores food produced by the leaves during photosynthesis and uses it to produce next year's flower, leaves and stem. They have roots to absorb water and nutrients for the tulip plant. Bulbs can multiply underground and be separated from each other, planted in new locations, and produce their own tulips.
No. A tulip produces a bulb which produces a seed pod.
A tulip is a flower grown from a bulb.
A tulip is a flowering plant. It grows from a bulb.
A Tulip
Yes, the mommy onion had twins. One stayed an onion, the other evolved to a tulip bulb.
Tulip
A tulip is a type of angiosperm also known as flowering plants. It is a bulb plant.
We're going to need another bulb. This tulip will grow from a bulb.
A tulip bulb can be found living a few inches below the soil is many well kept gardens, or in vast tulip fields mostly in Holland where they a farmed ready to be planted in our gardens.
the tulip tree ('tulipier' in French) is a deciduous tree. the flower tulip is a bulb plant which has no leave during winter.
no, the bulb its self is bigger than that
Though they are both flowering, herbaceous, bulb perennials, the tulip and the daffodil are genetically noncompatible. The daffodil is of the Family Amaryllidaceae and the tulip is of the Family Liliaceae. That's just too distant for the genes to line up properly for cross-pollination. Therefore, nothing happens except a waste of good pollen when pollen from one visits the stigma of the other.