One Hour, Over 100 Blooms: Trench Planting Spring Blooming Bulbs
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Nov 7, 2017 · Revised on Sep 18, 2025
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Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Nov 7, 2017 · Revised on Sep 18, 2025
Trench planting is a quick, efficient way to plant flower bulbs for hundreds of spring blooms with minimal effort. If you’ve ever visited a botanic garden in early spring, you’re sure to have seen brilliant swaths of blooming Tulips, Daffodils and Hyacinth. You don’t need a horticultural staff to get this look in your own yard! By trench planting bulbs in fall, you can easily get 100 bulbs planted in under an hour. With just a little time and planning, you’ll have a wonderful spring gift awaiting you.


You can mix bulbs that require different depths. Plant those that need the greatest depth first. Add a few inches of soil and plant the next layer of bulbs that need shallower planting, and so on.
You can also plant perennials on top of the bulbs, to disguise the bulb foliage as it dies back. Spring-blooming groundcovers such as Phlox, Veronica, and Thyme work particularly well, as they will bloom in tandem with the bulbs.
You can easily extend your garden's bloom season by choosing a variety of bulbs. Make sure you have early-spring, mid-spring, late-spring blooms in the mix, and you'll never have a gap in your flowers.
Plant bulbs at the right density for the best impact. You can fit quite a few bulbs in small spaces, so be sure to order enough to fill in your planting area with plenty of flowers. You'll find recommended bulb spacing on each product page, as well as on the bulb packaging.
For simple planting, choose bulbs that require the same planting density and planting depth. One easy way to do that is to plant a mix of the same bulb variety. For example, mini bulbs including Crocus, mini Daffodils, Grape Hyacinth (Muscari), and Mini Iris pair well, as most are planted with 16 bulbs per square foot and 2-4” inches deep.
Choose spring-blooming bulbs that naturalize - it means they are perennial bulbs that will multiply and spread. You’ll plant these bulbs just once, and enjoy them more year after year. Good naturalizers include Daffodils, Glory of the Snow (Chionodoxa), Grape Hyacinth (Muscari), and Wildflower Tulips. To ensure reblooming, fertilize after blooming each year with a 3-5-3 fertilizer.
If you have pressure from hungry deer or other pests such as squirrels and voles, choose critter-resistant bulb varieties such as Daffodils, Grape Hyacinth (Muscari), Fritillaria, and Hyacinth. Planting strong-smelling Fritillaria amongst Tulips will often deter pests from Tulip bulbs, which are not pest resistant. (Note: Wildflower Tulips are deer resistant!)
Your planting will truly be eye-catching if you stick to one color. You can accomplish this in several ways.
You can really create a spring show by planting large swaths of color in your lawn! Flowers will poke through the lawn and bloom in spring, well before the grass wakes up from dormancy and grows tall enough to mow.