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IN PHOTOS: Tulips showing their colours near Pownal, P.E.I.

Showing their colours
Vanco Farms employees work on a field of tulips in Waterside on Thursday. They are looking for different colours and viruses. Those plants then get removed so the stock stays healthy. The 50 acres of fields are located on the Waterside Road near Pownal and the tulips can be seen from the Trans-Canada Highway. People are able to view the flowers from Waterside Road, but are reminded entering, walking or driving through the field is prohibited and the flowers cannot be picked. Bulbs are planted in the fall and then covered in straw to protect them from weather fluctuations. When the tulips are in bloom, the petals are removed to let energy of the plant feed back into the bulb. The plants are left for about six weeks, allowing the bulbs to grow and propagate. The bulbs are harvested in mid-July. The company uses the larger bulbs in its greenhouse production and for sales to the landscape trade. The smaller ones are kept for another growing cycle in the field. Vanco is the only farm growing field tulips for bulb production on the east coast of North America. There’s also a one-acre field at Belfast Tulips, which is opening today at 9 a.m. One half is a u-pick and the other half is for professional photos. There’s a $10 admission and the price for a full bucket is $25.
Jason Malloy/The Guardian
Vanco Farms employees work on a field of tulips in Waterside on Thursday. - Jason Malloy

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POWNAL, P.E.I. — Vanco Farms employees work in a field of tulips on the Waterside Road near Pownal on Thursday, May 28, 2020.

People are able to view the flowers from the road but are reminded that entering, walking or driving through the field is prohibited and the flowers cannot be picked.

Bulbs are planted in the fall and covered in straw to protect them from weather fluctuations.

When the tulips are in bloom, the petals are removed to let energy of the plant feed back into the bulb.

The plants are left for about six weeks, allowing the bulbs to grow and propagate.

The bulbs are harvested in mid-July for use in the company’s greenhouse production, for sales to the landscape trade and for another growing cycle in the field.

There’s also a one-acre field at Belfast Tulips, which opens Saturday, May 30 at 9 a.m. One half is a u-pick and the other half is for professional photos.

There’s a $10 admission, and the price for a full bucket is $25.

Vanco is the only farm growing field tulips for bulb production on the East Coast of North America.

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