What we now grow may not be the Tenby Daffodil, which grows wild in south Wales as this never sets seed, but the perfect proportions admired by Bowles in the early 1900s remain the same, with a neat and tidy all-yellow flower. Perfect for planting into rough grass to provide ‘bombproof’ daffodils, these create a wild feel, and will bulk up and increase over the years. Some could equally well go into your borders, where they would need little attention. All yellow flowers, very suited to growing in rough grass or borders, March flowering 9" (22cm) tall.
Planting instructions
Plant the bulbs in groups of 2 or 3 in unregimented drifts for a ‘natural’ look, about 4-5” (10-12cm) deep and about 4” (10cm) between bulbs, but leave gaps too. Do not mow or fertilise the grass till they have gone quite dormant in July; this period of replenishment of the bulb's starchy food reserves is critical to future flowering. A liquid feed while starchy leaves are still green will benefit clumps in poorer soil.