Mid-spring blooms.
Sweetly perfumed pure white bells. Slender racemes show best when closely planted.
Z3-8. 5cm/up bulbs.
4-6" tall.Orders with subtotals $1,200 and above receive bulk pricing.
If you have placed orders totaling at least $1,200 within the past 12 months, additional orders qualify for bulk pricing.
Bulbs begin shipping in late September.
Trees and plants begin shipping in March.
Seeds ship year-round, with a pause in November.
Tools and growing supplies ship year-round.
Orders with subtotals $1,200 and above receive bulk pricing.
If you have placed orders totaling at least $1,200 within the past 12 months, additional orders qualify for bulk pricing.
Sweetly perfumed pure white bells. Slender racemes show best when closely planted.
Z3-8. 5cm/up bulbs.
4-6" tall.Variety | Product Type | Bloom Time | Height |
---|---|---|---|
Pearls of Spain | bulbs | mid-spring | 4-6" |
Valerie Finnis | bulbs | mid-spring | 6-8" |
Muscari armeniacum | bulbs | mid-spring | 6-8" |
Muscari latifolium | bulbs | early to mid-spring | 8-12" |
Muscari Bluezz Mix | bulbs | early to mid-spring | 4-12" |
Items from our perennial plants warehouse will ship around September 30 through October. Bulbs can be planted successfully up until your ground freezes.
Note to Alaska and far north customers: We cannot guarantee an early shipment, so please plan accordingly and order early.
We cannot accommodate specific ship date requests or guarantee your order will arrive by a certain day.
Distinctive pyramidal spikes of fragrant long-lasting densely packed bells, like upside-down grape clusters. Makes attractive borders, edging, or brightly colored filler between other bulbs. They thrive and increase except in damp or shady areas. Divide when dormant in summer. Do not cut their autumn leaves or they will lose vigor.
The Royal General Bulbgrowers Association in Holland (Koninklijke Algemeene Vereeniging voor Bloembollencultuur, or KAVB) puts this large group of diverse flowers into a boring catch-all category: Miscellaneous Bulbs. The expensive catalogs call them accent bulbs; some call them minor or dwarf bulbs (even though some of the fritillaries are huge!); Louise Beebe Wilder covered most of them in her 1936 classic Adventures with Hardy Bulbs. Whatever you call them, most are sweet, colorful, and completely welcome in spring.