7 things to plant to keep deer and squirrels away from your fall bulbs & spring flowers

Fall is a great time for planting daffodils, crocus, hyacinths and tulips, like the ones pictured here at Yew Dell Botanical Gardens in Kentucky.
Fall is a great time for planting daffodils, crocus, hyacinths and tulips, like the ones pictured here at Yew Dell Botanical Gardens in Kentucky.

About 10 years ago I received a phone call from a local gardener who was distressed over a perplexing garden problem. It seems something was eating her hostas, hydrangeas, tomato plants, and even her heavily thorned roses.

I suggested that it sounded like she was experiencing midnight raids by members of the Cloven Hoof Gang — easily identified by their black leather jackets and conspicuous antlers sticking out the top of their pompadours.

But on that suggestion, she responded, “Oh no ... that’s not it. I live in the city.” Turns out that by “city,” she meant Louisville's Indian Hills neighborhood, home of the biggest herd of hosta-fed deer since the invention of the Zoot Suit.

Living in the Louisville Highlands neighborhood for the last 25 years, I always thought of battling deer in the garden as someone else's problem. But that was until last year when about a 240-pound doe — and now her three fawns — took up residence in the neighborhood. My garden is now changing focus to all deer-proof, all the time. And now that we’re in the bulb planting season, that means I need to completely change my bulb planning.

In the world of spring flowering bulbs, it's no secret that in the minds of most people, tulips are king. And that’s completely understandable given the gargantuan flowers, stunning colors and, quite frankly the mystique surrounding 17th-century Europeans offering up the price of a modest house in exchange for one single bulb. Of course, the problem with tulips in the garden is that if you have one single deer within 5 billion miles of a flowering — or a getting ready to flower — tulip, that deer will hop a freight train, thumb a ride and ford the River Kwai to chow down on that tulip bloom exactly 12-hours before it opens!

Fall is a great time for planting daffodils, crocus, hyacinths and tulips, like the ones pictured here at Yew Dell Botanical Gardens in Kentucky.
Fall is a great time for planting daffodils, crocus, hyacinths and tulips, like the ones pictured here at Yew Dell Botanical Gardens in Kentucky.

You may likeAre apples harbingers of evil? Or just a delicious, crisp fall treat?

In short, if you have deer, you don't have tulips.

Enter daffodils.

If you know someone who wants to start gardening, daffodils are about as foolproof a starter plant as you can get. In fact, they are so forgiving that if someone plants a bunch of daffodils and none of them come up the following spring, they probably shouldn’t be trusted with a trowel ever again. Daffodils are tough, they can endure all manner of horticultural insults and they just keep on going.

The other nice thing about daffodils is that they are generally left completely unbothered by deer and moles, voles and lions, tigers and bears.

Narcissus Johann Strauss is a large cupped daffodil with a bright tangerine-orange cup and snowy white petals.
Narcissus Johann Strauss is a large cupped daffodil with a bright tangerine-orange cup and snowy white petals.

Members of the genus Narcissus, daffodils come in a wide range of sizes, shapes and flower forms — divisions in taxonomic parlance. The smallest top out at less than 6-inches tall and the tallest at almost 30-inches. Of course, the genus specializes in yellow but there are pinks, greens, oranges and multi-colors. There are early bloomers and late bloomers. They perform well in full sun or in the light shade of deciduous trees. At Yew Dell Botanical Gardens, we even plant them in containers for moveable spring garden treats. The American Daffodil Society is a great place to start.

You may likeTry these 5 tips for watering plants in your garden and home

But in the deer-proof garden, the bulb display can go well beyond daffodils.

Following is a list of a few of our favorites.

Summer Snowflake (Leucojum aestivum)

In my opinion, this is one of the most underutilized bulbs in the garden. It doesn’t make a massive color splash but it is indestructible, grows in sun or shade, and lasts forever. Growing 18- to 20-inches tall, it is topped in late spring with delicate white parachute-like flowers that last for weeks and weeks. It is a great partner to typical shade plantings of hostas, ferns, hellebores, and epimediums. Excellent in cut flower arrangements.

English and Spanish Bluebells (Hyacinthoides non-scripta, H. hispanica)

A bit shorter than the Summer Snowflake, the bluebells top out at about 15-inches tall with gray/green, strap-like leaf clusters. Small blooms are produced in late spring on upright spikes in a wide range of shades from deep blue to lavender, pink and even white. They work in the sun or shade.

Crocus (Crocus species and hybrids)

Crocus Sativus at Yew Dell Botanical Gardens
Crocus Sativus at Yew Dell Botanical Gardens

Crocus is always on the no-brainer list. They are inexpensive to buy and come in a range of colors from white to yellow, orange, pink and purple. They grow in sun and shade and can naturalize — spreading by seed over the years — as long as you don’t use pre-emergent herbicides. About the only pest problem is the occasional industrious squirrel who may "transplant" a few bulbs to the neighbor’s yard.

You may likeSo, what is hardscape landscaping? Here are 3 hardscape ideas for your garden

Snow Drops (Galanthus nivalis)

Snow Drops (Galanthus nivalis) start off the spring bulb season with cheerful white blooms in early March and they are rarely bothered by browsing animals.
Snow Drops (Galanthus nivalis) start off the spring bulb season with cheerful white blooms in early March and they are rarely bothered by browsing animals.

I never understand why snow drops are not in every garden. They are among the very first signs of life in the bulb garden, sometimes blooming as early as February. Their dainty, white flowers last for weeks and weeks through the time of year that we most need an emotional boost in the garden. They are inexpensive to buy but if you feel the need to go off the horticultural deep end, there are hundreds of cultivars that can set you back a fancy dinner's cost for a single bulb!

Siberian Squill (Scilla siberica)

If blue is your color, you’re in luck. Siberian squill fills a similar niche to the snow drops but a bit later in the spring season — but it blooms a stunning and most amazing cerulean blue! Squill will naturalize over time in garden beds or even on the lawn. Buy them by the hundred counts and spread them everywhere.

Alliums (Allium species)

The large ornamental onions (Allium 'Globemaster' and related varieties) are critter resistant bulbs for late spring and early summer.
The large ornamental onions (Allium 'Globemaster' and related varieties) are critter resistant bulbs for late spring and early summer.

Otherwise known as onions, there are dozens of species and hybrid groups for just about any garden situation. Some grow to 4-feet tall with massive, amethyst-colored blooms while others can top out no more than 6-inches tall with yellow flowers. Most flower in late spring and early to mid-summer. Some can be a little expensive. All of them are amazing!

Paul Cappiello is the executive director at Yew Dell Botanical Gardens, 6220 Old Lagrange Road, yewdellgardens.org.

This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: What to plant to keep deer away from your bulbs and spring flowers