Galanthus
All plants are supplied in 9cm pots.This snowdrop is more yellow and taller than G. ‘Wendys Gold’ but less vigorous, and consequently less often available. The leaves are distinctly yellowish. This snowdrop is named for the warden at Wandlebury Ring, where it was found. Please note the correct spelling.
Large yellow-marked flowers with yellow ovaries. The leaves are much greener than in other yellow varieties making it far more vigorous. Clumps up well. 20-25cm. An extremely vigorous selection of G. plicatus originally from a wood in Scotland..
The leaves are typical of Galanthus plicatus but the flower was unique for having the outer petals shaped exactly like the inner petals and with green tips. It is very slow to increase. This was found in a garden in the Bristol suburb of Westbury on Trym
This variety is unique in that the inner is two thirds yellow. It is an incredibly vigorous plant.This snowdrop is the first yellow to grow well in any soil, unlike yellow nivalis which is a weak plant. This snowdrop was found at the site of the Iron Age hill fort of Wandlebury Ring in Cambridgeshire it was named after the warden’s wife, Wendy.
An extremely pretty plant with very nicely shaped flowers. This is a free-flowering form with very narrow green leaves with a strongly grey central stripe. Exceptionally vigorous. It grows to about 10cm and emerges in early January. This graceful clone was collected by Dr John Marr in the 1970s in the former Yugoslavia.
Can have 3x3, 4x4 or 5x5 flowers all in the same clump. Often two flowers per bulb. Greenish leaves.