When snowdrops bloom - the very first spring flowers
Delicate drooping heads of snowdrops touchingly and charmingly look against the background of not yet melted snowdrifts. It is not for nothing that they are called primroses, because when snowdrops are blooming, other plants are still in a state of winter dormancy and are just beginning their journey to awakening. Literally making their way out from under the snow, these staunch messengers of spring are the first to proclaim that the frost will soon recede.
When snowdrops bloom
In addition, the species of Galanthus also affects the vegetation cycle. Some flowers bloom before everyone else, while other snowdrops can be called late at all.
What are snowdrops
Of the 12 species of these primroses, snowdrops can most often be found as a cultivated plant:
- Snow white. Bushes are low, about 10 cm in height. The flowers are white, with a pale green spot on the edge of the petals and barely yellow on the inside of the corolla. Bloom in March - April.
- Broadleaf. The height of the bushes can reach 25 cm, but wide leaves are a characteristic feature of the plants. Bloom in April - May.
- Folded. The length of the leaves is about 12 cm with a peduncle height of up to 30 cm. The species is distinguished by slightly elongated flowers, resembling an ellipse. Bloom in February - April.
- Elvis. Tall bushes up to 25 cm high with original blue-green leaves. The flowers are large, globular, bloom in February - March.
Flowering does not last very long - from 3 to 4 weeks, after which the aboveground part of the snowdrops dies off. Only bulbs remain in the ground, which next spring will again release narrow leaves and flower stalks.