Gardens of the Wild Wild West

Gardening is civil and social, but it wants the vigor and freedom of the forest and the outlaw. ~H.D. Thoreau

Amaryllis: upright and alright!

November30

Amaryllis or hippeastrum bulbs are the majestic queens of the bulb world. Providing a big pop of color with their trumpet shaped flowers when the rest of the garden is fast asleep, amaryllis are a garden geek’s delight in the dark days of winter.

Those luscious abundant blossoms often make the entire vase/plant topheavy, and more than once, the entire package has gone crashing to the floor. Here’s the fix, savvy gardeners: twigs to the rescue!

amaryllis bulbs

First, determine the overall height of the amaryllis at full bloom stage. The bulb shown here will top out at over 24 inches. I cut the twigs to 24 inches in length for the upright pieces, and left the natural tips on them for a more organic look, then placed the cut end of the branches in the water.

resized amaryllis support

IMG_2465

Red twig dogwood twigs work well, and you may even have the branches sprouting little green leaves in a couple weeks. Yellow twigs, thin bamboo sticks, curly willow, even contorted filbert can stand to the rescue. You will need four upright pieces for your container, plus cross twigs, 4 in all, and some raffia from the craft store. I use the plain raffia, its avaliable in lots of colors, as well. Creating the scaffold is easier if you can get a friend to assist by holding the twigs in place as you lash them together with the raffia. To ensure the twigs stay in place, you can put a drop or two of Elmer’s glue down in the raffia where it will dry clear.

Now that your support system is in place, stand back and watch the bulb rise to the holiday occasion.

Amaryllis_Minerva_face1

posted under Journal entries
7 Comments to

“Amaryllis: upright and alright!”

  1. On December 1st, 2009 at 12:16 pm Kaarina Says:

    That’s a cute contraption! I like the idea of bamboo…

  2. On December 1st, 2009 at 3:15 pm Mr. McGregor's Daughter Says:

    I hadn’t thought of using red-twigged Dogwood, which I just happen to have. That will look so good with the pot I’ve got the Amaryllis in.

  3. On December 1st, 2009 at 5:52 pm Carol Says:

    Cool idea. I do love my amaryllis blooms in the dark winter days.

  4. On December 1st, 2009 at 6:34 pm Cindy, MCOK Says:

    What a cool idea! I wonder if I could build a frame around mine? I might try that … when it stops raining and warms up a little. Where am I, anyway? Idaho? :-)

  5. On December 2nd, 2009 at 6:06 pm Kathy from Cold Climate Gardening Says:

    I will try to remember that for the next time I have an amaryllis.

  6. On December 3rd, 2009 at 7:03 pm Grasshopper Says:

    Wow! This is a great way of showing the beauty of Amaryllis. Nicely done.

  7. On December 11th, 2009 at 8:55 am commonweeder Says:

    What a great idea. I noticed you didn’t use any soil either. Inspiring. Roses are even less trouble – and you can find the least troublesome roses in Right Rose Right Place by Peter Schneider which I am Giving Away tomorrow, Saturday, morning. Visit and leave a comment, the book and two dozen CowPots could be yours.

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