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glory of the snow
$0
$11
/glory+of+the+snow?
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Height 6-8". Plant in sun or partial shade 2-3" deep, 3-4 " apart. Blooms early spring.
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Early spring lilac blue flowers. Excellent naturalizer. Interplant with daffodils and perennials.
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Blue Glory of the Snow bloom in early to mid spring and they flower for about a 3 week period. The bulbs can produce up to 10 blossoms. The plants are deer, rabbit, and squirrel resistant. These plants are great for mass plantings, containers, ground cover, and borders. The strap-shaped leaves form loose, rather untidy rosettes. The bulbs should be left in the ground after flowering. The Glory of the Snow 'Blue', 'Chionodoxa luciliae', a fall planted bulb, produce masses of open, star-shaped...
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Deep blue with a tiny white star in the center, these fine yet very robust bulbs are perfect for both sunny or shady gardens. Chionodoxa will reappear over many years, and spread to create a bright blue carpet, which disappears when the blooms are gone. Great for gardens with those notorious 'dead spots' or hard to reach areas. Also known as 'Glory of the snow'
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The Glory of the Snow 'Alba' '(white)', 'Chionodoxa luciliae', a fall planted bulb, produce masses of open, star-shaped white flowers. The star-shaped flowers are very strong and native to Asia Minor, Crete and Cyprus. Don't wait - order today! Allow foliage to die back naturally to make these bulbs last for years. Chionodoxa is often called Glory of the Snow because they peep into bloom sometimes before the snow has completely disappeared. The plants are deer, rabbit, and squirrel resistant....
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Lovely little plants, 4-5 in. tall, bear a profusion of tiny blue flowers in earliest spring. Grow anywhere, sun or shade. Multiply rapidly in borders, rock gardens.
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