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Talkback: Snowdrops
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Ah, I have a theory about galanthophile types. They seem to see in snowdrops what most of us see in people - variety. There's the large, showy type like "Colossus", the shy but dependable type like nivalis and nivalis flore-pleno with its pretty double flowers and the more studious ones with broader leaves like elwesii named after Henry Elwes. You find a great deal of gardening history even in the names of snowdrops. They flower usually, depending on the variety, from December to March but you can get ones that flower in Sept. There is a wonderful panorama of many species and varieties of snowdrops round Churchill Hall, a student residence in Bristol, interplanted with crocuses, gold,purple and white, which will turn anyone who sees it into a snowdrop-lover. It does not matter if it hurts to bend to see a flower more closely if you discover when you do it has just that streak of individuality that you love in your friends.
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I am wondering if it is too late to plant bulbs such as tulips......
Thanks
Can someone please advise how we can best manage this? Can we take out the bulbs now and keep them for replanting later in the year when we are replanting the garden? How can we store them without losing them?
All assistance greatly appreciated!
JaneH
But I think that they do need to be grown in profusion (preferably naturalising) to be really stunning - rather like our native bluebells later in the year. I celebrate them as "Candlemas bells", their other traditional name, since they come out at Candlemas (Feb 2), which comes at the "cross-quarter day", halfway between the winter solstice and the spring equinox, just when the lengthening days are starting to be noticeable. A cheering sign that winter is losing its grip! (hopefully...)