![]() |
Bulb Cake
From America’s Expert Source for Heirloom Flower Bulbs | My Basket |
|
|
|
|
| A Fun Family Tradition from the Ankers Family |
![]() Aaron Ankers displays his Bulb Cake; ready for “baking” “When my son was three and my daughter one, we moved from Fresno back to Ashland, Oregon, and rented a house there for a year and a half. I was happy to get back into a climate that could sustain crocus and tulips, but since we were renting I didn’t want to plant anything in the ground. So I bought a redwood window-box planter, potting soil, and about twelve Crocus tommasinianus, and one afternoon in October Aaron and I made a “bulb cake” together. I think I came up with that name as I was trying to explain to him how we were planting the crocuses: first we put in a layer of soil, then he placed the bulbs, and then we covered them up, like layers in a cake.
“When we eventually bought a house, the Bulb Cake moved with us. It was always the first thing to bloom in the spring, we never watered it all summer, and it increased steadily. A couple of years ago we moved to Virginia and my parents drove the Bulb Cake out to us. Aaron, who is now twelve, re-potted it last fall with fresh dirt and some more tommies, although many from the original planting are still in there as well. “The Bulb Cake is a fun project to do with little kids, but its real benefit is the lasting interest our kids ![]() The Bulb Cake after a season in the oven... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| For our print catalog click here or send $2.00 to Old House Gardens 536 Third St., Ann Arbor, MI 48103. phone: 734-995-1486 fax: 734-995-1687 charlie@oldhousegardens.com | ![]() |
For our free email newsletter, “The Friends of Old Bulbs Gazette” with tips, news, history, & special offers, send us an email with “subscribe” in the subject line to newsletter@oldhousegardens.com. |
| © 1993-2010, Old House Gardens. All rights reserved. | ||