Daffodils and carnations are totally different type of flowers from violets.
Yes. Daffodils can cause vomiting and diarrhea in cats that eat any part of the plant, be it leaves, pods, or flowers.
no. this is because daffodils are not poisonous. chocolate might kill cats though
Daffodils have to compete with its neighbors for available light, and it needs as much light as it can get to make food for the plant tissues and have enough left over to store in the bulb for next year's plant. The best way to do this is to have leaves that are long and flat to catch as much light as possible and not shade the neighboring daffodil leaves in the process.
Daffodils can be found in what is called the "temperate zone". They need a period of cold for the flowers to bloom properly. They do well in the USDA Plant Hardiness Zones 3-9. They can be growing wild in a meadow, pasture or lakeside, or they can be a cultivated ornamental type grown in gardens both rural and urban. Daffodils grow from a bulb. After a period of cold, when the temperature is right, it will send the new leaves and bud tipped stem above ground. The plant will live for about 10 weeks. The spent leaves will fall off and the bulb will be dormant for the rest of the year.
Technically a narcissus and daffodil are the same. However generally the term narcissus means the paperwhite variety of daffodil. When most people say daffodil, they often mean the variety with the trumpet. Jonquil means the variety that has tube shaped leaves. Other daffodils have flat leaves similar to iris leaves.
vancouvers vegatation
She likes the grass but not the lawn. She likes the trees but not the leaves. She likes daffodils but not flowers. She is odd but not peculiar!
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
Yes we have daffodils
"Daffodils" is the plural of "daffodil."
No, daffodils are not carnivorous. :P