Description
Tulip Spryng Break is the opposite of a flat, one-note tulip. Its big selling point is how the colour changes as the blooms develop, giving a planting a new look every few days. Early on, the flowers present as white with strong red flaming; as they open further and mature, the red softens and reads more rose-toned, and later the display can deepen again toward fuchsia-pink, while the inside of the flower holds a soft yellow base that adds warmth and depth. In a pot on a patio or at an entrance, that steady shift is very noticeable and feels like a longer season.
>For retailers, it?s an easy conversation starter and an easy upsell: customers get a changing colour story from one variety. It is supplied as a 7-bulb retail pack and shipped in outers of 5, which keeps shelf presentation neat and stock handling simple. Recommend it for sunny positions where the colour contrast is sharpest and for containers where customers will see the day-to-day changes up close; it also works well planted in grouped border clumps rather than scattered singly, so the flame pattern reads as a deliberate design.
Plant in autumn once soils cool, prioritising good winter drainage (containers or raised planting are the simplest route on heavier ground).
Tulips are mainly decorative, but as an open single flower it may provide small amounts of early-season pollen on mild spring days.




