Showing posts with label spring bulbs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring bulbs. Show all posts

05 February 2009

Early Spring Bulbs - Crocus, Aconite, Snowdrops & Siberian Squill




CROCUS

Crocus are native to central and southern Europe, the islands of the Aegean, North Africa, the Middle East, and middle and western China. They are part of the iris family and can grown in many different kinds of habitats. There are about eighty species of crocus. Crocus flowers and leaves are protected from the cold by a waxy outer layer. It's exciting to see early-flowering varieties of crocus blooming in the snow.

Did you know that the spice saffron is obtained from the stigmas of Crocus Sativus, an autumn/fall-blooming species? See History of Saffron.

You may have heard of Autumn Crocus or Meadow Crocus which isn't really a crocus at all - Cochicum is actually part of the lily family. However, there are some true crocuses that do bloom in the fall. Some bloom before their leaves appear. Autumn/fall flowering species include: Crocus banaticus (syn. C. iridiflorus), C.cancellatus, C. goulimyi, C. hadriaticus, C. kotschyanus (syn. C. zonatus), C. laevigatus, C. ligusticus (syn. C. medius ), C. niveus, C. nudiflorus, C. ochroleucus, C. pulchellus, C. sativus (saffron crocus), C. serotinus, C. speciosus, C. tournefortii. Crocus laevigatus has a very long flowering-period which can span late autumn or early winter and into February!

The first crocus in the Netherlands came from corms brought back from Constantinople by the Holy Roman Emperor's ambassador in the 1560s. A few corms were forwarded to Carolus Clusius at the botanical garden in Leiden.


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WINTER ACONITE

Winter Aconite is a member of the Ranunculus family, native to southern Europe and east toward Asia to Japan. The frost-tolerant flowers are yellow or white and are among the first to appear in spring. Their leaves show up when the flowers are finished.

Warning - All parts of aconite are poisonous, though the nasty taste discourages anyone wanting to eat them.

In Greek and Roman mythology, Medea tried to kill Theseus by poisoning him by putting aconite in his wine, thought to be the saliva of Cerberus, the three-headed dog who guarded the Underworld. Hercules dragged Cerberus up from the Underworld, while the dog turned his face away from the light, barking and depositing saliva along the path. The saliva hardened in the soil and produced its lethal poison in the plants that grew from the soil. Because it was formed and grew on hard stones, farmers called it 'aconite' meaning 'whetstone'.




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SNOWDROPS

Snowdrops are part of the amaryllis family. They are among the first bulbs to bloom in spring but there are some varieties that flower in late autumn and early winter.

Various types of Snowdrops are native to different areas of the world. Some originate from Europe, stretching from the Pyrenees Mountains in the west, through France, Germany and Poland. Others came from Italy, Northern Greece and Turkey as well as in the eastern Mediterranean, South Russia, Georgia and Azerbaijan. Still others came from Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey and Israel. Some snowdrop species have become threatened in their wild habitats and it is now illegal to collect bulbs from the wild.


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SIBERIAN SQUILL

Siberian Squill is also called known as the Wood Squill and Spring Beauty. It is a tiny, delicate intensely-colored bluish purple flower, native to Siberia. It spends the winter as a small bulb, perhaps as big as the end of a little finger. It puts up short, somewhat grassy foliage very early in the spring, produces one or more tiny blue flowers, goes to seed, and disappears by summer. Siberian Squill are great for naturalizing and in between rocks. They are very cold-tolerant.



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29 January 2009

Daffodils, Narcissus, Paperwhites & Jonquils - What's the Correct Name?



This flower has many names. It all depends upon where you live, what language you speak, and who you are!

According to botanists these flowers are a genus within the lily family and are called "Narcissus," named after the boy in Greek mythology who became obsessed with his own reflection in a pool of water. One version of this story says he fell into the water and drowned. Another version says he died of starvation and thirst while sitting by the edge of the pool while gazing at his reflection. Both versions claim that the first Narcissus plant grew from the spot where the boy died.

There are two theories as to the word "daffodil." One version is that the flower was named after "Dafydd," a Welsh form of the name "David." In Wales, it is a tradition to wear this beautiful flower on Saint David's Day, March 1st. Another version for the naming of this flower is derived from the word "Affodell", a variant of the Dutch "Asphodel."

The name "Jonquil" is sometimes used in the southeastern part of the USA to describe all daffodils. This name actually belongs to the species, "Narcissus Jonquilla" which has clusters of small yellow flowers:



Flowers of the "Narcissus Papyraceus" species are commonly called "Paperwhites" and have clusters of small white flowers: