Different daffodil cultivars can be early, mid or late season bloomers. Generally speaking, in Zone 5 the early blooming cultivars should be showing their pretty heads about mid-April. However please keep in mind that the bulb answers to the soil temperature. A colder winter will delay the plant and a warm winter will bring it in earlier.
There's information on several "Hubbards", but the one thing that is consistent for all of them is there athere is no available information on how many daffodils are growing wild or in someone's garden.Are you up around Hubbard Glacier? There are no daffodils on the glacier, of course, but that area of Alaska and Canada, which is Plant Hardiness Zone 3, daffodils do very well and bloom in the late calendar spring.How about the city of Hubbard, Ohio? That locality is in USDA Hardiness Zone 5 - good for daffodils.Then there's Hubbard County, Minnesota. They are in Zone 3b and can grow daffodils.
Syracuse is in Hardiness zone 5....5a to be exact
The iris grows in spring. In zone 5, it blooms in May. However there are some iris that will do a repeat bloom in September.
Caroline Bloom is 5' 3".
Heather Bloom is 5' 6".
Nichole Bloom is 5' 7".
Ocean Bloom is 5' 4".
Samantha Bloom is 5' 4".
Lexi Bloom is 5' 1".
The names "daffodil" and "narcissus" are interchangeable, but the name "jonquil" is used for Division 7 daffodils, characterized by very narrow, almost cylindrical, leaves and 1-5 (rarely up to 8) fragrant flowers per stem. Most other daffodils have flat leaves. All daffodils have some fragrance, and the jonquils and tazettas (Division 8) have the strongest. Most daffodils bloom within 4 to 6 weeks after the first appearance of foliage in the very early spring. Depending on location and cultivar, the blooming season can last from 8 weeks in northern climates to almost six months in the Lower South. Answer taken from an article on Buzzle.com
5
Conrad Bloom - 1998 The Unsinkable Conrad Bloom 1-5 was released on: USA: 26 October 1998