tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384577046142926600.post6984097862567739680..comments2023-09-30T13:13:17.486+01:00Comments on The Green Fingered Blog: Tulips - To Lift Or Not To Lift? Green Fingered Bloggerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01240533182819092891noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384577046142926600.post-38210873259311479172017-07-01T23:35:16.089+01:002017-07-01T23:35:16.089+01:00Hi JJ, thanks for reading my blog, and for comment...Hi JJ, thanks for reading my blog, and for commenting too. Great idea to use a liner for your tulips, I may try that one in the hope it will make them easier to find and harder to accidentally chop in two whilst lifting them! Thanks again,<br />PaulGreen Fingered Bloggerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01240533182819092891noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384577046142926600.post-29117103618195211362017-07-01T08:08:11.120+01:002017-07-01T08:08:11.120+01:00Morning! I've dug up and stored mine. Or most ...Morning! I've dug up and stored mine. Or most of them. I think I'm going to put them all in the borders this autumn (vs containers). This is a thinly veiled excuse to buy more bulbs for the containers. Do you think my wife will see through this cunning plan? I have taken to planting the tulips in plastic pot liners so they can be removed when gone over and left to it in a corner where the dying foliage isn't an eyesore. I like a tulip, definitely worth getting a year or two more useful life out of them. JJnoreply@blogger.com