Expand your daffodil expertise with comprehensive knowledge of all 13 horticultural divisions, breeding programs, forcing techniques, and design strategies for spectacular displays.
Sarah Green
Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.
Mastering Daffodil Diversity
The 13 official daffodil divisions represent centuries of breeding and selection, each with unique characteristics and uses. Understanding these classifications enables sophisticated garden design and informed variety selection for continuous bloom and specific purposes.
The 13 Official Divisions
Division 1: Trumpet
Definition:
- One flower per stem
- Corona (trumpet) as long as or longer than perianth segments
Characteristics:
Subdivisions by Color:
- 1a: Yellow perianth/yellow corona
- 1b: White perianth/yellow corona (bicolor)
- 1c: White perianth/white corona
- 1d: Other color combinations
Top Varieties:
| Variety | Color | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 'Dutch Master' | Y-Y | Gold standard |
| 'Mount Hood' | W-W | Pure white |
| 'Las Vegas' | W-Y | Large bicolor |
| 'Rijnveld's Early Sensation' | Y-Y | Earliest bloomer |
Division 2: Large-Cupped
Definition:
- One flower per stem
- Corona more than 1/3 but less than equal to perianth length
Characteristics:
- Largest division with most variety
- Huge color range
- Generally reliable
- Excellent for naturalizing
Top Varieties:
| Variety | Color | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 'Carlton' | Y-Y | Reliable workhorse |
| 'Ice Follies' | W-Y→W | Fades to white |
| 'Pink Charm' | W-P | Pink cup |
| 'Salomé' | W-PPY | Pink/peach tones |
| 'Professor Einstein' | W-O | White/red-orange |
Division 3: Small-Cupped
Definition:
- One flower per stem
- Corona not more than 1/3 of perianth length
Characteristics:
- Often strongly colored coronas
- Flat, circular flowers
- Many from Poeticus heritage
- Often fragrant
Top Varieties:
| Variety | Color | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 'Barrett Browning' | W-O | Classic look |
| 'Verger' | W-GYR | Show variety |
| 'Segovia' | W-Y | Miniature |
Division 4: Double
Definition:
- One or more flowers per stem
- Extra perianth segments, corona segments, or both
Characteristics:
- Heavy flower heads
- May need support
- Generally later blooming
- Often fragrant
Types:
- Full doubles (rose-like)
- Semi-doubles
- Varying degrees of doubling
Top Varieties:
| Variety | Color | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 'Tahiti' | Y-O | Yellow/orange |
| 'Cheerfulness' | W-Y | Fragrant, multi-flowered |
| 'Replete' | W-P | Pink tones |
| 'Obdam' | W-W | Very full |
Division 5: Triandrus
Definition:
- Characteristics of N. triandrus clearly evident
- Usually 2+ pendant flowers per stem
- Reflexed perianth
Characteristics:
- Graceful, nodding flowers
- Usually fragrant
- Excellent for naturalizing
- Mid to late season
Top Varieties:
| Variety | Color | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 'Thalia' | W-W | Classic, fragrant |
| 'Hawera' | Y-Y | Miniature, multi-flowered |
| 'Ice Wings' | W-W | Very white |
| 'Petrel' | W-W | Multiple flowers |
Division 6: Cyclamineus
Definition:
- Characteristics of N. cyclamineus evident
- One flower per stem
- Reflexed perianth
- Acute angle between flower and stem
Characteristics:
- Earliest divisions
- Swept-back petals
- Long coronas relative to petals
- Excellent for naturalizing
Top Varieties:
| Variety | Color | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 'February Gold' | Y-Y | Very early |
| 'Jetfire' | Y-O | Orange cup |
| 'Tête-à-Tête' | Y-Y | Most popular dwarf |
| 'Jack Snipe' | W-Y | Bicolor |
| 'Peeping Tom' | Y-Y | Extra-long trumpet |
Division 7: Jonquilla
Definition:
- Characteristics of N. jonquilla evident
- Usually 1-5 flowers per stem
- Spreading perianth
Characteristics:
- Sweet fragrance (essential characteristic)
- Small to medium flowers
- Dark green, rush-like foliage
- Late blooming
- Heat tolerant
Top Varieties:
| Variety | Color | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 'Quail' | Y-Y | Strong fragrance |
| 'Trevithian' | Y-Y | Classic jonquil |
| 'Pipit' | YW-W | Reverse bicolor |
| 'Bell Song' | W-P | Pink cup |
Division 8: Tazetta
Definition:
- Characteristics of N. tazetta evident
- Usually 3-20 flowers per stem
- Spreading perianth
Characteristics:
- Very fragrant
- Often early in warm climates
- Less cold-hardy (zones 6-9)
- Includes paperwhites
Top Varieties:
| Variety | Color | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 'Geranium' | W-O | Very fragrant |
| 'Avalanche' | W-Y | 15-20 flowers |
| 'Grand Soleil d'Or' | Y-O | Yellow/orange |
| 'Paperwhite' types | W-W | Indoor forcing |
Division 9: Poeticus
Definition:
- Characteristics of N. poeticus evident
- One flower per stem
- White perianth
- Very small, disc-shaped corona
Characteristics:
- Intensely fragrant
- Very late blooming
- Distinctive "pheasant's eye" appearance
- Long-lived, naturalizes well
Top Varieties:
| Variety | Color | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 'Actaea' | W-GYR | Classic, reliable |
| 'Recurvus' | W-GYR | Old pheasant's eye |
| 'Milan' | W-GYO | Orange-edged eye |
Division 10: Bulbocodium
Definition:
- Characteristics of Section Bulbocodium evident
- Usually one flower per stem
- Insignificant perianth, prominent corona
Characteristics:
- Hoop petticoat appearance
- Small, often wild-looking
- Early blooming
- Rock garden favorites
Top Varieties:
| Variety | Notes |
|---|---|
| N. bulbocodium conspicuus | Yellow hoop petticoat |
| 'Golden Bells' | Bright yellow |
| N. cantabricus | White species |
Division 11: Split-Corona
Definition:
- Corona split for at least 1/3 its length
Subdivisions:
- 11a: Collar - corona segments opposite perianth segments
- 11b: Papillon - corona segments alternate with perianth segments
Characteristics:
- Butterfly-like appearance
- Flat, open flowers
- Often good for cutting
- Dramatic but different look
Top Varieties:
| Variety | Color | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 'Cassata' | W-Y | White/yellow |
| 'Orangery' | W-O | White/orange |
| 'Tricollet' | W-OYY | Multicolored |
Division 12: Miscellaneous
Definition:
- Daffodils not fitting other divisions
Examples:
- Unusual forms
- Complex hybrids
- Unique breeding lines
Division 13: Species and Wild Hybrids
Definition:
- Wild species and natural hybrids
Characteristics:
- True to wild forms
- Generally smaller
- Often excellent naturalizers
- Important for collectors and breeding
Notable Species:
| Species | Origin | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| N. asturiensis | Spain | Tiniest trumpet |
| N. poeticus recurvus | Europe | Classic poeticus |
| N. jonquilla | S. Europe | True jonquil |
| N. pseudonarcissus | Europe | Wild daffodil |
| N. rupicola | Iberia | Yellow rock species |
Advanced Forcing Techniques
Prepared Bulbs
What They Are:
- Pre-treated with specific temperature sequences
- Flower earlier than natural cycle
- Professional forcing standard
Temperature Treatments:
| Bulb Type | Treatment |
|---|---|
| Standard prepared | 9 weeks at 17°C, then cold |
| Ice tulip method | Extended freezing for year-round |
Forcing Schedule by Division
| Division | Cold Weeks | Forcing Temp | Total Weeks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trumpet | 15-17 | 60-63°F | 4-5 |
| Large-cupped | 15-17 | 60-65°F | 3-4 |
| Tazetta | 0-4 | 60-65°F | 3-5 |
| Cyclamineus | 15-17 | 55-60°F | 3-4 |
Paperwhite Forcing (No Cold)
Standard Method:
- Bulbs in stones/pebbles with water
- Root in cool (50-60°F), dark location
- Move to light when shoots 3-4 inches
- Bloom in 3-6 weeks total
Controlling Stretch: Use 5% alcohol solution (1 part liquor to 7 parts water) after roots develop to reduce stem height by 30-50%.
Hybridization Basics
Flower Anatomy for Breeding
Male Parts:
- 6 stamens (inner whorl of 3, outer whorl of 3)
- Anthers contain pollen
Female Parts:
- 3-part pistil
- Stigma receives pollen
- Style connects to ovary
Basic Cross
- Select parents - Complementary traits
- Emasculate - Remove anthers from seed parent before pollen shed
- Bag flower - Prevent unwanted pollen
- Collect pollen - From pollen parent
- Pollinate - Apply to stigma when receptive
- Re-bag - Prevent contamination
- Label - Record cross and date
- Harvest seed - When pod ripens
Growing Seedlings
Year 1-2:
- Sow seed in fall
- Grass-like single leaf emerges spring
- Summer dormancy
- Small bulb forms
Year 3-5:
- Bulb enlarges
- Multiple leaves
- Still no flowers
Year 5-7:
- First bloom
- Evaluate traits
- Select or discard
Breeding Goals
| Goal | Parent Selections |
|---|---|
| Improved pink | Best pink cups × pink cups |
| Red cups | Intensely colored × stable red |
| White trumpets | White × white for purity |
| Perennialization | Proven naturalizers |
| Disease resistance | Healthy stocks × healthy |
Landscape Design Strategies
Bloom Time Sequence
Earliest (Late Winter-Early Spring):
- 'Rijnveld's Early Sensation' (Trumpet)
- 'February Gold' (Cyclamineus)
- Division 10 species
Early Spring:
- Most Cyclamineus hybrids
- Early Trumpets
- Tazetta types (mild climates)
Mid Spring:
- Large-cupped
- Small-cupped
- Doubles
- Triandrus
Late Spring:
- Jonquilla
- Poeticus
- Late doubles
Naturalistic Planting
Meadow Style:
- Throw bulbs randomly on ground
- Plant where they land
- Use species and small cultivars
- Don't mow until foliage browns
Woodland Edge:
- Plant in drifts under deciduous trees
- Sun reaches them in spring before leaf-out
- Triandrus and Cyclamineus excel
- Mix with ferns, hostas for summer cover
Formal Display
Mass Planting:
- 15-25+ bulbs per square meter
- Single variety for impact
- Grid or offset planting
- Replace annually or perennialize
Layered Bulb Design:
- Deep: Tall daffodils
- Medium: Small daffodils
- Shallow: Crocus, muscari
Division and Multiplication
Natural Increase
Rate:
- 1 bulb → 3-5 bulbs in 3-4 years
- Varies by variety
- "Proliferous" varieties multiply faster
When to Divide
Signs Needed:
- Reduced flowering
- Crowded clumps
- Flowers smaller
- Center dying out
Timing:
- After foliage yellows
- Early summer
- Allow to dry before storage or replant immediately
Division Process
- Lift clump carefully with fork
- Shake off soil
- Separate individual bulbs
- Discard damaged or diseased bulbs
- Replant immediately or cure and store
Storage for Delayed Replanting
- Dry in shade for 1-2 weeks
- Store at 60-65°F
- Good air circulation
- Low humidity
- Replant in fall
Understanding the full range of daffodil divisions and advanced cultural techniques opens possibilities for spectacular displays, personal breeding projects, and year-round enjoyment through forcing.
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