How To Choose & Plant Tulips
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Oct 26, 2016 · Revised on Sep 18, 2025
Knowing your location helps us recommend plants that will thrive in your climate, based on your Growing Zone.
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Oct 26, 2016 · Revised on Sep 18, 2025
By Katrina Godshalk
Simple, elegant, and endlessly variable, Tulips are staples of spring wherever they grow. Here are some guidelines to help you with choosing, planting, and growing Tulip bulbs. Tulips are planted in the fall for a beautiful display of spring blooms. Be sure to choose a selection of bloom times, including early-spring, mid-spring, and late-spring to keep you in flowers all season long.
Officially, Tulips are perennial plants. Originating in the steppes of Central Asia, they evolved at altitude in harsh winters and dry summers. Through hybridizing and the difficulties of matching the original Himalayan climate, the tendency of many tulips to perennialize has diminished.
However, at High Country Gardens, we offer Tulip selections with the strongest perennial features. We carry mostly Darwin Tulips, Emperor Tulips, and perennial Wildflower Tulips, known for the ability to return for years to come, and to spread and naturalize. Triumph Tulips and Tulipa greigii may also return for more than one season. For gardeners looking for those classic bright blooms, we also carry annual tulips that will generally not return for a second season.
We carry a wide variety of wildflower tulips. These smaller growers will amaze you with their huge flowers in many extravagant colors. They are strong naturalizers (meaning they increase in numbers during each growing season by propagating more bulbs) and are an essential source of early-season nectar and pollen for hungry honey and native bees. Learn more in our guide: The Wonderful Wildflower Tulips
For more planting ideas, learn more in our guides:
In the spring, when blooms have faded, cut the flower stems back. Let the foliage age to yellow before removing, as this is how the bulb feeds itself. They are the ultimate xeric bulb, so no extra watering needed for the summer.
Whether you enjoy tulips as cut flowers, or as elegant harbingers of spring in the garden, waiting for their arrival at winter’s end is one life’s sweetest pleasures.
Did You Know?
In Europe, in the 1630s, “tulip-mania” swept Holland. One bulb of Tulip Semper Augustus was sold for 10,000 guilders, an amount that could have bought a grand home on the canal and was ten times the yearly income of a craftsman. The madness over tulip bulb contracts and the subsequent crash in prices almost brought the Dutch economy to ruin.
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