Many of the old varieties of daffodils do grow wild along the roadsides, in meadows and around old homes that may be falling down or gone, but the daffodils return each spring. There are some new varieties that do need a bit of looking after, but in general daffodils do well without tending from humans.
Daffodils grow anywhere you plant the bulbs.
As daffodils or Narcissus are not native to North America they will not be found growing naturally in the wild, but they may be found in the wild having escaped from cultivation or been planted by man.
There are many wild daffodils that grow in the south. Basically, they are cultivated daffodils that escaped gardens and naturalized over a period of many years. They grow in pastures, ditches, in sweeps under trees, and anywhere their foliage can remain undisturbed by mowers.
Many daffodils are "wild types". Are you asking if cultivars can "go wild"? The good thing about daffodils is that they require very little human care. Have you ever seen a meadow where there are daffodils in what looks to be a garden setting? Long after the people have died and the house has fallen and crumbled away, the daffodils will still be in their gardens. Daffodils don't really need to "adapt". They already have toxins in thier tissues that keep weeds at bay. They are early spring flowers - up before the major invasion of weeds occurs. The cultivars that would have the hardest time "going wild" would be the late season ones who might find weed competition can overwhelm them.
Yes, if they are picked from a public place, any wild flowers are illegal to pick as they are considered public property
Yes we have daffodils
"Daffodils" is the plural of "daffodil."
There's information on several "Hubbards", but the one thing that is consistent for all of them is there athere is no available information on how many daffodils are growing wild or in someone's garden.Are you up around Hubbard Glacier? There are no daffodils on the glacier, of course, but that area of Alaska and Canada, which is Plant Hardiness Zone 3, daffodils do very well and bloom in the late calendar spring.How about the city of Hubbard, Ohio? That locality is in USDA Hardiness Zone 5 - good for daffodils.Then there's Hubbard County, Minnesota. They are in Zone 3b and can grow daffodils.
Yes. In fact, they can actually choke out and kill other Daffodils if they become too numerously dense in one small location. They also return each year, usually early spring up until the mid summer.
No, daffodils are not carnivorous. :P
daffodils are not found in India.
Daffodils have been around many many centuries. In fact daffodils are older than humans. Daffodils evolved sometime in the Oligocene period or Miocene period.