What To Do With Offsets – Planting Small Shoots Growing From Bulbs

Small Shoots Growing From Bulbs

Image by kazakovmaksim

Bulbs can be propagated in several ways, but one of the easiest is through division. Those little shoots coming from a bulb indicate that the bulb is reproducing underground. Each little shoot will become a bulb in time and flower. The small shoots growing from bulbs are the fastest way to get more blooming plants.

Reproducing Bulbs with Shoots Growing from Offsets

Bulbs produce bulbils and bulb offsets as easy propagation parts. You need to know what to do with offsets to increase your stock of favorites. The shoots growing from offsets will tell you when it is time to divide and remove the new baby bulbs.

You can wait until the shoots coming from a bulb die back to divide or take the offsets when the leaves are still green.

Bulbs are propagated through seed, scales, bulbils, chipping, and division of the shoots growing from offsets. Starts from seeds take a ridiculously long time to flower and are really only useful as a hobby and interesting project.

Growing from scales is useful for lilies,
while chipping works on daffodils,
hyacinth,
and a few other species. Bulbils are easy to grow but, again, take quite some
time to flower. The quickest and easiest way is through offsets, which can
flower within a year or two.

The small shoots growing from bulbs are an indicator that
your plant is mature and has decided to make babies. Not all bulbs reproduce
this way, but many of our most common ones do. This is a bonus because your old
bulb will begin to produce smaller flowers and eventually none at all. However,
the bulb offsets will become new flowers and the parent bulbs produce many,
meaning more beautiful flowers!

What to Do with Offsets

You can take the offsets at any time, provided you are prepared to care for them if they still have leaves left. Dig around the main plant carefully and remove the small bulbs around the main bulb. If these have already sprouted, plant them in a prepared bed and water them in.

Keep them moist as they establish. The leaves will drop off in the fall. Mulch the bed for winter. In areas where you have to lift tender bulbs for winter, dig up the plant and collect all the offsets. Separate these out from the large parent plant, which will begin to produce less and less. Plant the small bulbs in spring.

This article was last updated on 12/21/21
Read more about General Bulb Care

Bulbs can be propagated in several ways, but one of the easiest is through division. Those little shoots coming from a bulb indicate that the bulb is reproducing underground. Each little shoot will become a bulb in time and flower. The small shoots growing from bulbs are the fastest way to get more blooming plants.

Reproducing Bulbs with Shoots Growing from Offsets

Bulbs produce bulbils and bulb offsets as easy propagation parts. You need to know what to do with offsets to increase your stock of favorites. The shoots growing from offsets will tell you when it is time to divide and remove the new baby bulbs.

You can wait until the shoots coming from a bulb die back to divide or take the offsets when the leaves are still green.

Bulbs are propagated through seed, scales, bulbils, chipping, and division of the shoots growing from offsets. Starts from seeds take a ridiculously long time to flower and are really only useful as a hobby and interesting project.

Growing from scales is useful for lilies,
while chipping works on daffodils,
hyacinth,
and a few other species. Bulbils are easy to grow but, again, take quite some
time to flower. The quickest and easiest way is through offsets, which can
flower within a year or two.

The small shoots growing from bulbs are an indicator that
your plant is mature and has decided to make babies. Not all bulbs reproduce
this way, but many of our most common ones do. This is a bonus because your old
bulb will begin to produce smaller flowers and eventually none at all. However,
the bulb offsets will become new flowers and the parent bulbs produce many,
meaning more beautiful flowers!

What to Do with Offsets

You can take the offsets at any time, provided you are prepared to care for them if they still have leaves left. Dig around the main plant carefully and remove the small bulbs around the main bulb. If these have already sprouted, plant them in a prepared bed and water them in.

Keep them moist as they establish. The leaves will drop off in the fall. Mulch the bed for winter. In areas where you have to lift tender bulbs for winter, dig up the plant and collect all the offsets. Separate these out from the large parent plant, which will begin to produce less and less. Plant the small bulbs in spring.

You might also like
Leave A Reply