Woodland White
Woodland White
Mid Spring Bulbs In Woodland. What You Need To Find Out
Bluebell, which can be white or pink as well as blue, prefers the cool, damp shade near a hedgerow or the leafy soil in a deciduous wood, especially among beech trees. It starts to flower in mid spring, but its main season is late spring. Dog's tooth violet prefers sparse grass, although it, too, will grow in the shade of shrubs or deciduous trees. It is one of the prettiest of the spring flowers, with its delicate, swept back petals in white, pink or lilac.
Summer snowflake like damp soil where it has a good moist root run and will form a lovely graceful slump in grass or woodland. Another wonderful neutralizer is wood anemone, which is at its best in a deciduous wood or beneath shrubs. It will soon spread to form a dainty white carpet, looking perfect with a clump of dog's tooth violets or a group or two of bluebells.
Try it beneath a spring flowering tree or in the light shade of summer flowering shrubs, where it will thrive with a good mulch of leaf mould. Nekoosa is one of several blue forms, and Robinson is a lighter blue. Trilliums also like the shade. They are found in the woodlands of the mountains in eastern North America where they revel in the damp humus, especially near mountain streams.
They prefer either neutral or acid oil. The best known species is wake robin or wood lily, which has white flowers that turn pink as they age. Black fruits are formed, which ants take away to their nests, eating the pulp but leaving the seed and so helping to propagate the plants.
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