Daffodils announce the arrival of spring & play an essential part in most garden plantings. We offer a mixture of the true dwarf & many of the smaller garden worthy hybrids. They are best planted in clumps or used for naturalising in grass etc; the dwarf varieties are most suited on a rockery, raised bed, border or in pots. Large daffodil bulbs should be planted at 15cm depth and the smaller ones at 7-10cm.
Very limited availability. A true miniature daffodil with solitary, fragrant rich yellow flowers, 10-15cm tall in March. Erect glaucous, short leaves. Ideal subject for a trough. One of those plants that despite its small stature bring great joy to your heart. Suitable for trough, raised bed or well drained rockery.
Narrow, dark green leaves that grow horizontally rather than upright. Very early flowering, producing golden yellow flowers 4cm tall in early spring.
Perfect for a trough.
The best & most floriferous Hoop Petticoat that reliably produces five or more bright golden-yellow flowers per bulb in mid to late April, 20cm, good for naturalising in rough grassland or in an open garden situation.
Early, large white flowers from December to early February on 10-15cm stems, a beautiful and yet rarely offered cross between N. cantabricus ssp. monophyllus and N. romieuxii, named by the great Margaret and Henry Taylor.
Named by my late father Bob Potterton, this was one of his favourites with graceful simple yellow flowers like an enlarged N. cyclamineus, up to 25cm in February or March. It has proven to be an excellent, robust garden hardy and garden worthy plant, long-lived.
A superb daffodil, very closely resembling the species N. cyclamineus but larger in all parts. Long stout trumpets golden yellow, no more than 20cm tall, fully hardy. Naturally small bulbs.
Probably the finest of all the cyclamineus hybrids, excellent for pot culture or garden where it is equally long lived. Lemon-yellow petals with neat orange trumpets.
Delightful and distinctive pale yellow flowering miniature daffodil, darker yellow at the base & tips of the tube, on 7 to 12cm stems in March. Hardy in a well drained soil, for a raised bed, large trough.
Pale lemon cups, maturing to white with white outer petals that are slightly swept back, two or three outward facing flowers per stem in mid Spring, 30 to 40cm tall.
Creamy-white drooping flowers, tinged with pale yellow, 20cm tall in April. Very similar to the unobtainable legendary Narcissus alpestris in form. This is a really beautiful daffodil, which each year looks quite spectacular in our display feature garden. Limited availability.
This is the true species, seed raised for many years at the nursery with distinctive prostrate, dark green leaves and large deep yellow dumpy flowers on 12cm stems in March to April. Hardy, well drained soil in full sun.
Unusual & distinct form with fully double large yellow flowers on relatively short 15cm stems in April. The full flowers look more like roses than daffodils.
A neat plant with 10cm stems of typical mid yellow flowers from December to February. Pot culture in a cold frame or cold greenhouse. Originally collected in Morocco.
Upward facing pale lemon flowers aging to white, 10-15cm tall, January to March, for a warm sheltered garden or pot culture in the bulb frame or cold greenhouse.
This is not ‘Jack Snipe’. Early flowering with swept back creamy-white petals, cylindrical shaped corona, starting creamy-yellow fading to white, rarely offered, about 15cm.
An excellent, sturdy dwarf bicoloured daffodil, creamy-white petals, pale lemon trumpet from March-April. Relatively short stems to 15cm which seems to make the flowers look even bigger and bolder.
A dwarfdaffodil with sturdy stems to 20cm bearing 2-3 flowers, 5cm across with reflexed white perianth segments. Small creamy-yellow trumpet which fades quickly to white.