In this guide, we'll cover how to plant daffodil bulbs at the right time and in the right place. We'll also touch on propagation, problems, and what exactly you're supposed to do after your flowers have faded. So read on to learn how to grow one of the most cheerful types of bulbs out there. Daffodil Quick Facts

Yellow is the most common color for daffodils, but they also bloom in white, cream, orange and even pink. You can choose from several different flower styles, including trumpets, doubles, split-cups, large-cups and jonquillas.

Brilliant in beautiful, golden colors, daffodils (Narcissus spp.) hold out the promise of long, sun-filled days to come, and with 13 different divisions, the many daffodil varieties can provide over three months of gorgeous spring flowers!

The dependable, spring-flowering daffodil is a favorite for its long life and carefree, colorful blooms. Other common names include jonquil and narcissus. Daffodils bring cheer to the spring garden with abundant flowers in hues of yellow, white, pink, salmon, orange, and red. Varieties are available in a range of sizes and forms.

The Royal Horticultural Society has been an important factor in promoting narcissi, holding the first Daffodil Conference in 1884, [174] while the Daffodil Society, the first organisation dedicated to the cultivation of narcissi was founded in Birmingham in 1898.

Daffodils (Narcissus spp.) are among the most popular, easy-growing spring-flowering perennial bulbs. These bulbs thrive in climates with a winter chill and shortly after temperatures warm up in the early spring, clusters of strappy leaves appear, followed by flowers with trumpet-shaped cups.