Cyclamineus Daffodil Care

Daffodils grow best in full sun and moist, well-drained soil. Improve poorly drained soil before planting the bulbs, or plant your daffodils in raised beds where you control the soil mixture. Daffodils grow best when surrounded by dry soil in summer, so skip the irrigated landscape beds. Aim for a planting spot that receives at least 6 hours of sun a day, which may include the ground beneath a canopy of deciduous trees. Daffodil growth is nearly completed before deciduous trees leaf out in spring, which makes planting under the canopy of such trees possible. Bulbs planted under trees may require additional watering as tree roots can rob soil of moisture. Plant daffodils in fall after the soil has cooled slightly but before cold weather sets in and the soil freezes. The base of the bulb should be 6 to 8 inches below the soil surface (shoot for 2 to 3 times as deep as the bulb is long). Space individual bulbs 6 to 12 inches apart. Make quick work of planting drifts of bulbs by digging a large trench and scattering several bulbs in the planting hole. Cover newly planted bulbs with a 2-inch-thick layer of mulch to prevent weeds and keep soil temperature uniform. When daffodils finish flowering, the leaves go to work producing food and flowers for the following year. Although it is tempting to snip away daffodil foliage as it yellows, allow it to stand for about eight weeks after the plant blooms. At that point, pull up the loose and withered foliage and toss it in the compost pile.

Varieties of Cyclamineus Daffodils

‘February Gold’ daffodil

Narcissus ‘February Gold’ is a miniature selection that grows 8-12 inches tall. In the South, it may bloom in February; elsewhere it will be one of the first daffodils to bloom. The bright gold flowers are less recurved than most other varieties in the cyclamineus division. Zones 4-9

‘Itzim’ daffodil

This variety has a rocketlike yellow flower with a rich orange cup. The cup first appears yellow but deepens to orange as the bloom ages. This award-winning selection grows 10-12 inches tall and blooms early in spring. Zones 4-9

‘Jack Snipe’ daffodil

Narcissus ‘Jack Snipe’ offers pale yellow petals that unfold around a golden-yellow, frilled trumpet. It grows 10 inches tall. Zones 4-9

‘Jetfire’ daffodil

This cultivar creates a flock of sunshine-yellow petals that curl back from the long central cup to give the impression of a jet-propelled flower. This variety grows only 10 inches tall but makes a big impression in containers. Zones 4-9

‘Peeping Tom’ daffodil

Narcissus ‘Peeping Tom’ is an old-fashioned variety with a long yellow trumpet and slightly recurved yellow petals. It blooms in early to mid-spring on stems 6-12 inches tall. ‘Peeping Tom’ naturalizes well. Zones 3-9

‘Rapture’ daffodil

This variety is a nodding yellow-on-yellow daffodil with flared petals resembling a shooting star. It blooms in early to mid-spring and grows 12 inches tall. Zones 4-8

‘Tete a Tete’ daffodil

Narcissus ‘Tete a Tete’, whose name is French for “head-to-head” or “face-to-face,” gets its moniker from its clusters of one to three flowers borne on petite 6- to 8-inch-tall stems. The bright yellow blooms appear in early spring. This miniature daffodil multiplies rapidly, quickly forming a mass planting in landscape beds or naturalizing in grassy areas. Zones 3-9

‘Wisley’ daffodil

This variety has elegant white recurved petals and a large, frilly yellow cup. This daffodil, named for the famous English garden, blooms in early spring on stems 10-12 inches tall. Zones 4-9