🌼 Unleash the Fragrance of Luxury in Your Garden!
UtopiaSeeds offers 6 large and plump Lily of the Valley bare root plant pips that thrive in shaded areas and bloom beautifully in May, providing a delightful fragrance that is a staple in high-end perfumes.
D**S
it blooms!
I plant it two weeks ago, and now it is blooming. Short, but blooming. All roots was alive and make green leaves now.
K**Y
Never grew!
I bought this Lily of the Valley, tulips and paperwhites all at the same time. The Lily of the Valley roots were moldy when they arrived and were the only ones that did not even grow, much less bloom.
A**R
Hard to keep alive
Love the plant but only got one bloom
S**E
Planting
How do i plant these do roots go out of the dirt and bulb goes under? Or bulb under dirt i did not get instructions with it
C**S
Dead roots
Only two actual pips came. Both dead.
K**R
Poor quality followed directions did not grow
I have been growing Lily's of the valley since I was kid I'm 65 now so I know I didn't make mistake planting or tending them just wouldn't grow bad bulbs I believe
J**F
How to grow lily of the valley from pip.
Break up the top 6 inches of soil in a shaded site with moist, well-drained soil or fill a pot or other container with a high-quality, well-drained potting soil. If the soil in a site lacks fertility or is poorly drained, work about 3 inches of an organic matter soil amendment like well-rotted compost or aged manure into the site. For container growing, choose a container that is at least 3 inches deep and offers ample drainage holes. The appropriate container size depends on the number of pips you wish to plant in it. Plan to space the pips at least 3 and no more than 6 inches apart. Separate the pips, if they are bundled together, and gently pull clumps with multiple pips apart so that each individual pip has a proportionate amount of roots. Dig small holes and plant the pips, with roots radiating out as much as possible, so that each pip is about 1 inch below the soil surface. Space the pips 3 to 6 inches apart, gently firming the soil around each pip.Water the pips and surrounding soil thoroughly at planting to settle soil around the roots and encourage establishment. Water the area around the lily of the valley plants as needed until shoots emerge, keeping the soil constantly and evenly moist, but not wet. Place any containers with planted pips in a dark, well-ventilated spot with a temperature maintained between about 60 and 65 degrees Fahrenheit. Once shoots begin to emerge above the soil surface, move the containers to a spot that receives bright but indirect light or that is partially shaded. Posted to answer a question that had no answer button/link. Will add photo when mine grow. Caution this is a toxic plant.
D**.
That plants arrive alive
The plants arrived quite dead, but unplanned them anyway-but they were dead, so they didn’t grow. TOTAL WASTE OF MONEY.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 month ago