Forcing bulbs is a way to manipulate spring bulbs so that they flower early, bringing a much-needed burst of colour into the home during the winter months. Try these bulb combinations to learn how to force bulbs yourself. Images by Jason Ingram

By Gardens Illustrated Team

Published: Tuesday, 19 September 2023 at 16:01 PM


Forcing bulbs allows you to enjoy the colours of spring bulbs in the depths of winter. It involves careful preparation of bulbs to give them a long-enough period in cool, dark conditions before bringing them indoors to flower. Paperwhite narcissi and oriental hyacinths and amaryllis (Hippeastrum) are traditional choices for forcing as you can buy ready-prepared bulbs. But you can prepare and grow a wide variety of garden bulbs indoors, from muscari and scillas, to iris and crocus, to create something unique (see container combinations below).

Don’t miss our piece on the best hyacinth bulb vases.

What does forcing bulbs mean?

Forcing bulbs simply requires mimicking the cold, dark conditions of winter (ideally at a temperature of between 1.5ºC and 10ºC) for around ten weeks to give the roots time to develop, before bringing them indoors where the warmth (above 15ºC) and light will fool the bulbs that spring has arrived so that they sprout and bloom around four to six weeks early. The forced hyacinths that are sold commercially to flower in time for Christmas have been pre-chilled. You can do this yourself by keeping the bulbs for 12 weeks in the bottom of the fridge, but not all bulbs need this.

How to force bulbs

Tips for forcing bulbs

Bulbs for forcing

Clockwise from left: Crocus chrysanthus ‘Romance’, Iris reticulata ‘Katharine Hodgkin’, Anemone blanda ‘Charmer’, Muscari armeniacum

Muscari macrocarpum ‘Golden Fragrance’
These choice bulbs are unusual and worth seeking out. The highly fragrant, greenish flowers turn a rich yellow with age. 18cm.

Iris ‘Katharine Hodgkin’ (Reticulata)
My queen of the dwarf iris. Bred in the 1960s by enthusiast EB Anderson, this pale-blue iris is long lived and even after forcing it is worth planting outside amid snowdrops and cyclamen. The flowers are wide and opulent, with sea-green veining and soft, yellow-blue tones. 12cm. AGM.

Scilla messeniaca
This scilla is lesser-known but more impressive than Scilla siberica. It has up to seven leaves and an abundance of flowers on each stem. 15cm. Read our guide to growing scilla.

Crocus ‘Romance’
Very free flowering bulb, and an usual primrose yellow. Will establish easily if planted out. 7-10cm. Read our guide to growing crocus.

Muscari aucheri
One of the loveliest blues, and strongly scented. Works well in a pot indoors so that the scent can perfume a room. 12cm.

Anemone blanda ‘Charmer’
Pretty, pale-pink flowers with a light centre. The divided foliage has pinky tones on the underside of the leaf. 12-15cm. Read our guide to growing all kinds of anemones.

Crocus ‘Ruby Giant’
With purple hues that are much richer than others in this group and wonderful contrasting golden anthers, this is a showy and fragrant early cultivar. 12cm.

Galanthus nivalis ‘Viridapice’
Single drooping flowers with a distinctive green blotch at the tips. No need to ‘force’ as it flowers early, but bring into the warm to get them flowering. 15cm. Read our guide to growing snowdrops.

Cyclamen coum f. pallidum ‘Album’
Spring-flowering cyclamen, from the pine and beech woodland of southeastern Europe and the Middle East. Flowers range from dark magenta to the white form I have used here. 8-12cm. Read our detailed guide to growing cyclamen.

Three forced bulb combinations to enjoy indoors

Muscari, scilla and iris

Muscari macrocarpum ‘Golden Fragrance’, Scilla messeniaca, Iris reticulata ‘Katharine Hodgkin’, Cornus mas and Corylus avellana

Muscari and scillas bulbs have been used here to make the most of their fragrance. In late winter they will fill a room with their sweet, musk perfume, conjuring a warm Mediterranean spring that is still months (and miles) away. The tight flowers of Cornus mas naturally occur in the same habitat as both the muscari and the iris, so it’s a good choice for the twig supports. The starting point for this display was the baby blue on the enamel flour bin.

Muscari, iris and crocus

Iris reticulata ‘Katharine Hodgkin’, Crocus chrysanthus ‘Romance’, Muscari armeniacum and Anemone blanda ‘Charmer’ – © Jason Ingram

A group of pots with forced bulbs works particularly well for table decorations. In this display, a decorative pot has been used to emphasise the ornate veining of the iris and a simple rustic terracotta pot for the anemone and the muscari bulbs. The unusual pale yellow of the crocus combines well with the aqua and yellow flowers of the iris. Dress your bulb containers with a layer of grit to finish off the look.

Anemone blanda, snowdrop, crocus and cyclamen

Anemone blanda ‘Charmer’, Galanthus Viridapice, Crocus Tommasinianus ‘Ruby Giant’ and Cyclamen coum album

Woodlands offer the very earliest spring flowers as the bulbs have evolved to jump in and flower before the leaf canopy closes above them, and this is a woodland-inspired display. Think of snowdrops, cyclamen and anemones that are often found mingling together on the forest floor in the eastern Mediterranean. Here the shiny, round leaves of the cyclamen bring texture and reflective light to the planting. While the large, open flowers of the crocus add a dramatic shot of vivid, ruby purple. The upright linear foliage is a good contrast and adds height. This display has been planted into a homemade log planter and the texture of the bark (silver birch) gives the plants an immediate context. Tuck moss in between the plants for a finishing woodland touch.