landscaping ideas, home & garden by jkworthy

Fragrant Gardens are more than just roses!

fragrant gardens

Muscari armeniacum
Plant Abstract

Known as- Grape hyacinth
Grow Zone - 4 to 8
Type- Bulb
Familial- Liliaceae
Smith Scl. hardy? No
Geography- Southeastern Europe to Caucasus
ht.- 0.5 to 0.75 ft.
Span- 0.25 to 0.5 ft.
Coloring- Royal blue with a thin white rim on each bell
Shade/Light- Full sun to part shade
Moisture- Medium dampure
Hi/Lo Maint- Low
Abstract-
Easily grown in average, moderate wet, well-drained soil in full sun to part shade. Plant bulbs about 3” deep and 3” apart in fall. Flowers emerge in early spring. Keep ground damp during the spring growing season, but reduce watering after foliage begins to die back. Although plants of this species go dormant in summer, they produce new leaves in autumn. Naturalizes well by both bulb offsets and, under favorable growing conditions, self-seeding.
Attributes-
Native to southeastern Europe, this species of grape hyacinth is a perennial bulb that features conical racemes of slightly fragrant, tightly packed, deep violet blue, urn-shaped flowers atop scapes rising to 8” tall in early spring. Each bulb produces 1-3 scapes with 20-40 flowers per scape. Each flower has a thin white line around the rim. Dense inflorescence purportedly resembles an elongated, upside-down bunch of grapes, hence the common name. Scapes rise up from somewhat floppy clumps of narrow, fleshy, basal, green leaves (to 12” long) that appear in autumn and live through the cold St. Louis winter to spring when the plants flower.
Issues-
No serious insect or disease problems.
Common Applications-
Provides spectacular drifts of color when massed in open areas, around shrubs, under deciduous trees, in the rock garden or in the border front. Also mixes well with other early blooming bulbs. Popular container plant. Also forces easily for winter bloom.