Last night we had rain, rain and more rain, and winds. I was therefore very pleased that yesterday just as it was getting dark I went out to pick a few snowdrops to today's vase. This is being linked into Cathy's weekly In a Vase on Monday Post.
At the end of January some of the early snowdrops seem to be earlier than they were last year. Other snowdrops seem to be a little late, or at least I hope they are late and have not succumbed under the stresses of weather or insects, or the S &S gang!
Looking out from the conservatory at breakfast on Sunday I asked Mr S which snowdrop particularly appealed to him. He pointed out three types at present out, close to the conservatory, which he liked and Galanthus Bertram Anderson was one of them. This is a early impressive large flowered snowdrop with a large strong green apical mark on the inners. These are on the left hand side of the arrangement.
On the other side is the early flowering double Mrs Beatrix Stanley. They are quite distinctive in the garden with the pointed outer petals and the tiny green apical mark reduced to just two dots either side of the notch on the inner petals. When I look out at these double snowdrops the thinner pointy petals remind me of canine teeth. I received these originally as a couple of bulbs from Anna in 2019, and six year later I have a few good clumps.