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pvnrhodeisland

Plant bulbs in a box?

8 months ago

I have a 31" L x 11" W x 8-3/4" D. garden box. I would like to plant some bulbs but worry they will freeze...will they?


In RI - has been pretty mild winter wise lately - no guarantees of that of course. Thank you!

Comments (11)

  • 8 months ago

    For years, here in central Massachusetts (zone 6 now, apparently), I have planted bulbs in containers successfully (for the most part). However, I keep them in my unheated garage until spring arrives, then bring them out. As far as I know, bulbs in containers WILL freeze in my area.


    Tulips, hyacinths, narcissus all do well. Good luck!

    Pv Picotte thanked roxanna
  • 8 months ago

    Excellent for you - not so much for me. don't have heated garage unfortunately. I might plant a few and throw a heavy covering over them. Winters have been mild - so maaaaaybe......Thanks so much.

  • 8 months ago

    He said an UNheated garage. You can mimic the same thing by using the south side of

    a building, surrounding with straw bales, and covering the top with pine straw.

    Pv Picotte thanked Sherry8aNorthAL
  • 8 months ago

    Absolutely correct - read that too fast. Think I'm stuck with current location - on my deck - up 4 stairs - way too heavy to move. I'll try covering it with something - thanks for suggestions.

  • 8 months ago

    Don’t in- ground bulbs freeze in very cold zones anyway? I would think that if you planted bulbs zoned for a couple of zones colder than yours, that might work. I could see a problem with freeze/thaw in a container ( a warmer, sunnier day) or with too- early sprouting getting nipped. So covering them might be more to keep temps from fluctuating, and you mightn’t want to cover/ bake them in sun.

    I’m completely “ thinking out loud “ here, so bulb experts could correct me.
    Pv Picotte thanked marmiegard_z7b
  • 8 months ago

    Hmm. Good thoughts. The sun may not be a problem - it is lower and not quite as warm as summer, I think. - I'll check out the bulb situation.

  • 8 months ago

    Absolutely!!

  • 8 months ago

    gardengal, that makes sense, although I had thought that ground got colder in prolonged winters up north. So yeah, thinking of a frozen potato…
    Are roots different? Wouldn’t shallow roots freeze? Or do they have different water movement in cells.

    Pv Picotte thanked marmiegard_z7b
  • 8 months ago

    It depends on the roots :-) Some plants just have roots that are more - or less - sensitive to cold temperatures. One example that comes immediately to mind is Japanese maples. Inground hardy to zone 5 and in some cases, zone 4, their roots are damaged at 26F (reinforcing the data re: frozen soil temps). So that means growing them in containers pretty much anywhere poses a risk. Even in my very mild zone, we can experience some very cold temperatures with a not uncommon Arctic blast.

    The risk of frozen roots or bulbs is really focused on growing these plants in containers. They are fine in the ground.

    Pv Picotte thanked gardengal48 (PNW Z8/9)
  • 8 months ago

    I have a solution - I have an oblong - 8' deep plantr box. I will put bulbs in there and keep in my unheated shed until spring. Then into my larger dec box. My next obvious problem is bulb availability - think I missed the boat - looks like Christmas stuff is in the stores already - thanks to all.

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