The star-shapped flowers of the Alpine Squill (or Scilla bifolia) slightly nod atop of spikes from strap-like leaves. The colors of these particular squill range from bright blue to lilac to pale blue centers. These are one of the most shade tolerant spring blooming bulbs and are shunned by deer and rodents!
This Mixed Squill (or Mixed Scilla) bulbs are great for naturalizing in hard-to-grow lawn areas. The mixed hues of pink, whites, and blues make this plant a great groundcover or border. Their great resistance to deer and rodents also makes them a great woodland plant!
The bright blue flowers of the Siberian Squill (or Scilla) are one of the very first of the spring blooming bulbs to brighten up the landscape. Growing only 4-8" tall, these little wonders will grow wonderfully along a wooded edge or in a flowerbed border. Try planting them under a tree where you can't get grass to grow and be amazed!
The bright purple flowers of the Striped Squill (or Scilla) are one of the very first of the spring blooming bulbs to brighten up the landscape. They carry a slight sweet fragrance and work great for mass planting and naturalizing. Try planting these in your "hard to grow" lawn areas for a nice groudcover effect!
Try this Jumbo Pack and discover how great these flowers look in mass plantings!
Native to the Middle East, the Striped Squill (or Puschkinia libanotica) is one exotic flower! Its small pale blue flowers rise above 6" straplike leaves, each small blue strips present on the petals. Grows well along wooded edges and in borders and naturalizes readily in mass plantings and drifts.