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The foliage from the earliest bulbs stays green into the beginning of July here (and that of later bulbs can sometimes stay green most of the summer, amazingly), and I think that's one of the main impracticalities of naturalizing small bulbs in lawns in this area. So, depending how "kempt" the lawn/meadow is meant to be, and how tall the grasses are, that is a definite factor.
Last year we cut our alpine meadow slope in August which meant that some late flowerings had time to set seed and I hope will multiply this year. The joy of letting the meadow grow is not only in the wonderful tapestry of flowers for free but also the birds and butterflies that it attracts - I look forward to this each year.At the base of the south facing slope I have experimented in planting a few Crocus Vernus (Balkan Dark tip petals), kindly given to me by a Forumist, to see if they like it there and in the hope that the melt water will find them....no sign of growth yet. Higher up they grow prolifically on the base of a steep sided valley facing South/East...I live in hope
I have already mention my meadow is 40 years old with a limy soil. The Yarrow cultivated itself like many other weeds. My meadow is not an alpine meadow, but a Mediterranean alpine meadow with a large number of bulbs that well grow. If the leaves of the bulbs become drying, I mow the lawn. If in the autumn the first flower appear I stop to mow. I see never a flower of the Yarrow , the flowers are always cut off. By cut in summers, the Yarrow a carpet-like appearance gets. I think in the meadow is a good relationship between grass, weeds and Yarrow . And that developed in the course of the years automatically. By the way, in summer looks my meadow not very nice.
Thank you to all who are contributing. It is giving much food for thought. I have a lot of white clover, which I have been trying to eradicate, maybe I should leave it as a suitable groundcover and just eliminate grass and weeds. It does not grow too high and would only ever need a mow on a highish cut. Susan