Rethinking bulbs – Jacqueline van der Kloet

I’ll admit that my relationship with flower bulbs has been a bit rocky. Part of it is that I live on an extremely wet piece of land with heavy clay soil, and most of the common flower bulbs aren’t well adapted to those conditions. To grow bulbs here at Ellis Hollow that are native to the Mediterranean or Central Asia requires considerable site modifications.

More and more, I’m focusing on species that can tolerate (or even thrive) with wet feet — Leucojum, Camassia and the like. But I think I’ve finally put my finger on the problem:

Conventional wisdom says plant bulbs in tight drifts to maximize impact at that time of year when you really yearn for color. So I get plantings that look like this:

rescued tulips

Not bad. (Especially considering that I rescued these tulips from spent forcing pots.) But not very satisfying either. And definitely not my style.

My style is on the wild side. If you’ve visited here regularly, you know that my biggest design influence is Piet Oudolf — the Dutch designer famous for his naturalistic designs and focus on plant and flower form more than color. So imagine my excitement upon discovering this past year that he teamed up with Dutch bulb desitgner Jacqueline van der Kloet in his Battery Park (New York City) and Millennium Park (Chicago) installations.

I first read about van der Kloet in this Chicago Tribune story by Beth Betts, and despite all I’ve read since, I think Beth sums up best what’s unique about van der Kloet’s approach:

A troop of red tulips standing tall beside a regiment of yellow daffodils. A march of blue grape hyacinths. A platoon of hyacinths in a pot.

That’s how gardeners traditionally plant spring bulbs: in solid masses of a single type …

But there is another way. Spring bulbs can relax, mix and mingle, dancing with the emerging green of perennials, in an ongoing rhythm that moves smoothly from early spring into summer. … Instead of a regiment, they can be a sprinkle and a sparkle, more like a patch of intermingled wildflowers that appears in a meadow or a woods after a long winter.

That sounds more like what I should be shooting for.

Betts quotes van der Kloet:

“I think bulbs have more qualities than only color. … They also can make a nice contrast to the growing leaves of perennials.” She mixes bulbs with varying colors, shapes and bloom times and scatters them in casual clusters. The aim, she says, is to treat the bulbs and other plants “as if they are players in the same play, not first the bulbs and the perennials later.

In practice, this means planting mixes of bulbs over wider areas (not the small platoons I have scattered here and there now) and strive for random spacing. Striving for randomness is kind of an oxymoron, I think. I mean I’ve been planting bulbs randomly in drifts for years. I just can’t figure out how come they all end up spaced 4 to 6 inches apart. ;-7

As I start putting this new bulb attitude into practice, what will it look like? I’m not sure. If I relied on tulips (deer and squirrels limit my use), it might look more like this than the image above. Or like this.

You can see more images of van der Kloet’s designs at her website (links to English version).

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

2 thoughts on “Rethinking bulbs – Jacqueline van der Kloet”

  1. wow. methinks i’ll be taking a trip to Battery Park come tulip time. The image of the alliums and phlomis along with the others makes it look amazing.
    Thanks for the great links!

Comments are closed.