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Bloom time, color and size are among the most common reasons for choosing plants. You may also choose them because of fragrance, texture, or culinary value. Warm colors, such as the reds and yellows of tulips and narcissus, seem to pop toward the front of a landscape, while cool colors, like the hues of purple violets or blue iris, recede into the background. Experiment with colors by cutting a few pictures out of garden catalogs and rearranging them. Perennial tulips are special because, unlike many hybrids, they come back reliably year after year. Locate fantasy tulip, pretty tulip, astilbe etna red, and picotee begonia mix in internet shop.
- The intense, icy blue and gray flowers are striking with long, pointed bracts that radiate out beneath the flower heads.
- Click here for Daffodils from Breck's

- Click here for premium Lilies from Brecks

- The Fritillaria imperialis Aurora features orange-red, bell-shaped flowers up to 3 inches across, growing in a cluster of six to eight flowers.
- The large, bold, double blooms of these luscious Dutch Double Daffodils will enhance any outdoor setting in early to mid-spring.
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