Gladiolus 'Bibi' | Hardy Gladiolus Bulbs | Pink Sword Lily | Summer Blooming Flower Bulbs | Cut Flower Garden Plant
Brighten your summer garden with the charming blooms of Gladiolus ‘Hardy Bibi’, a compact hardy gladiolus variety featuring soft pink flowers accented with deep rose-pink flecks. This elegant sword lily produces graceful flower spikes that attract butterflies and bees while adding long-lasting color to borders, pollinator gardens, and fresh floral arrangements.
With a slightly shorter growth habit than traditional gladiolus, ‘Bibi’ is perfect for smaller gardens, containers, and front-of-border plantings while still delivering dramatic summer blooms.
🌟 Why Gardeners Love ‘Hardy Bibi’
- 🌸 Soft pink blooms with rose flecks
- ✂️ Excellent cut flower variety
- 🦋 Pollinator-friendly blooms
- 🌿 Hardy perennial gladiolus
- 🪴 Compact size for smaller gardens
- 🌞 Easy-to-grow summer flowering bulb
- 💐 Long-lasting blooms for bouquets
🌱 Plant Details
- Botanical Name: Gladiolus ‘Hardy Bibi’
- Common Name: Hardy Sword Lily
- Plant Type: Flowering Perennial Bulb/Corm
- Flower Color: Pink with Deep Rose Flecks
- Mature Height: 24–36 inches
- Growth Habit: Upright Clumping
- Bloom Season: Mid to Late Summer
- Light Requirements: Full Sun
- Water Needs: Average
- Soil Needs: Well-drained soil
- Hardiness Zones: 3–11 (lift corms in zones 3–4)
- Characteristics: Deer resistant, pollinator friendly, compact growth, easy care
🌿 Perfect Garden Uses
✔ Cottage gardens
✔ Pollinator gardens
✔ Summer borders
✔ Container gardens
✔ Cut flower gardens
✔ Mass plantings
✔ Floral arrangements
✔ Small-space gardens
🌸 Companion Plants
Pairs beautifully with:
- Lavender
- Coneflowers (Echinacea)
- Salvia
- Yarrow
- Roses
- Coreopsis
- Ornamental grasses
These companion plants create colorful, pollinator-friendly summer displays.
🌱 Care Tips
- Plant corms in spring after frost danger passes
- Plant 4–6 inches deep and space 4–6 inches apart
- Prefers full sun and well-drained soil
- Water regularly during active growth
- Stake flower spikes if needed in windy locations
- Deadhead spent flowers to encourage continued blooming
- Lift and store corms in colder climates before winter frost