Botanical Name: Crocus bulb hybrids
Crocus flowers are among the first to herald spring, sometimes popping their bright blooms through the snow. Fortunately, we don't have to wait till spring to enjoy these glorious flowers. Growing crocus indoors is easy to do by forcing them into bloom mid-winter. Start the process in fall -- October is an ideal time.
A crocus bulb is actually a corm. Corms produce beautiful cup-shaped blooms in purple, lavender, white or yellow -- plain or striped -- each with a bright orange stigma. All have slender, upright leaves that are green and white striped.
Crocuses need a cold treatment for 12 weeks to bloom. If you bought pre-chilled corms, you can skip this step.
Height: Up to 8 in (20 cm)
Light: Keep in a dark location during cold treatment. Cover pot with a box, pot or black garbage bag if necessary. After shoots appear, move to bright light with some direct sun as directed above.
Water: Water sparingly until growth appears, then water enough to keep soil evenly moist. Flowering plants are thirsty, so check them often.
Humidity: Average room humidity.
Temperature: Cool to average (40-60°F/6-16°C)
Soil: Any good potting mix.
Fertilizer: Feed monthly with a balanced liquid fertilizer diluted by half from planting until start of blooming. Do not fertilize while plants are in bloom.
Propagation: Corms will not bloom a second time indoors. They do produce offsets, but they take a few years to mature. If you want to keep them, allow the foliage to die back naturally, then store them in a cool, dry place. Plant the corms in your flower garden in the fall and let Mother Nature take care of them. They'll bloom when they're ready.
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