ball suckers
Nerines flower in Autumn and the leaves grow in Spring. The same applies to Autumn Crocus.
it has a life cycle like humens it sprouts/leaves/bulb /flower/and dies
Daffodils can reproduce sexually, so, yes, they do have pollen. It is located in the center of the flower on six stamens which are very close to the style. There are no reported allergies to daffodil pollen, which is good news for spring hayfever victims.
The amaryllis lily bears a huge trumpet shaped flower followed by long, strap-like leaves. It grows from a bulb that is often sold as a gift or for decorating around the Christmas holidays. The bulb sends up a flower atop a long stalk that makes a fine indoor plant during the dark winter days. After it fades green foliage appears which signals the time to feed and water until the bulb replaces the energy used for flowering.
No it will not. But don't cut all the leaves off with the flower. Let the leaves stay on the plant until they turn yellow and wither. They're needed to produce food for the bulb to store for next year's plant.
The actual daffodil flower grows out of the bulb on its own stalk. There are no leaves attached to this stalk. The daffodil bulb can put up a variable number of leaves each year. The number depends on the size of the bulb. The larger the bulb, the more leaves it needs to produce food to support the tissue and to store away for next year's growth.
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.
Yes, you can plant other flowers around tulips when their leaves are still green. Be careful not to dig into the tulip bulb when planting the new flowers. When tulip leaves are yellow and brown and drying, you can give them a small tug and they'll come free from the bulb. Don't remove them while still green - they're making food for the bulb to store for next year's blooms.
NO!! the bulb is what starts the new amaryllis flower is you take off the bulb youll never have another flower.
If you're speaking of the bulb plants like daffodils, tulips and daffodils, don't cut them prematurely. You can cut the dead flower and its stem right after the flower dies. This prevents it from wasting its energy making seeds instead of storing food in the bulb for next year's plant. Let the leaves stay on the plant to make the food for storage - until they turn yellow and wither up.
A Tulip
bulb