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The site is known for its bluebells in the spring.
But the hard work now should pay off in the spring with a fine show of bluebells.
They sat in the little wood where bluebells were standing.
But all too soon, the bluebells stop ringing and by the beginning of summer, they are gone.
Tears were gathering in big eyes the color of bluebells.
"I have a standing order for bluebells, and well you know.
Bluebells grew right up to the little wall that surrounded it.
He glanced back and saw the two little girls gathering bluebells.
Under the trees to the left of him the ground was misty with bluebells.
She related that he stopped and bought a bunch of the year's first bluebells.
How about a stroll down to the woods to see the bluebells?
Bluebells are among the main attractions for visitors in spring.
Dole Wood nature reserve, a good place to see bluebells.
They were examining the kitchen floor when Diana came in with her bluebells.
He pressed her down upon the grass, among the fallen bluebells.
Walking down, she found the bluebells around her glowing like a presence, among the trees.
Those who want to find bluebells in their full glory must venture beyond London.
The Common has some fine old oaks, and bluebells in the hedge bottom.
And a winter spring clean.making way for next year's bluebells.
During the spring many of the woods are carpeted with Bluebells.
Here too we could see small patches of bluebells.
The wood is particularly known for its bluebells during April and May.
In spring there is a large covering of bluebells on the woodland floor.
If you get bluebells, notice which group or groups they belong to, and plant accordingly.
I can see the powdery colour of bluebells coming into flower under the trees.
The correct one, at this moment, is Hyacinthoides hispanica, which you'll probably never see.
In 1990, bluebells assigned to the species Hyacinthoides italica were reported from north-western Spain.
Cyanella hyacinthoides is a species of cormous annual or perennial herb native to South Africa.
Hyacinthoides Heist.
In 1934, Pierre Chouard transferred the species to its current placement in the genus Hyacinthoides.
Bellevalia hyacinthoides (Bertol.)
Bluebell (Hyacinthoides non-scripta)
Other common names are baby's breath and bluebell, although these are also used for other plants, particularly Gypsophila and Hyacinthoides (respectively).
If you have full shade after trees leaf out, Anemone nemorosa, Galanthus, Erythronium and Hyacinthoides will do better than tulips.
Hyancinthoides non-scripta, Hyacinthoides hispanica, Dactylorhiza purpurella, Centaurium erythraea.
Of particular interest is the abundance of Common Bluebell (Hyacinthoides non-scripta), a species rare outside woodland habitats in Somerset.
Beneath them are Dog's Mercury (Mercurialis perennis) and Common Bluebell (Hyacinthoides non-scripta).
- Linnaeus first named the Italian bluebell Scilla italica; Rothmaler transferred it to the genus Hyacinthoides.
On the dunes between Tel Aviv and Haifa we log wild scarlet tulips and admire pale blue Scilla hyacinthoides.
The ground flora, which includes abundant Bluebell (Hyacinthoides non-scriptus), varies in conjunction with differences in soils which range from mildly calcareous to acid.
Wood Anemone (Anemone nemorosa) and Common Bluebell (Hyacinthoides non-scripta) are both locally abundant.
Scilla was the original Greek name for the sea squill, Drimia maritima; Endymion is a character from Greek mythology; Hyacinthoides means "like a hyacinth".
Many members of the subfamily are popular garden plants, such as Hyacinthus, Muscari, Scilla, Puschkinia, Hyacinthoides, and Ornithogalum (including those formerly placed in Galtonia).
The two species also hybridise readily to produce fertile offspring known as Hyacinthoides x massartiana; the hybrids are intermediate between the parental species, forming a spectrum of variation which connects the two.
- Linnaeus first named this bluebell species Scilla italica; Rothmaler transferred it to the genus Hyacinthoides; the ICN does not require that the dates of either publication be specified.
The type species of Hyacinthoides is H. hispanica, while that of Endymion is "Scilla nutans", described by James Edward Smith in English Botany in 1797, but now treated as a synonym of H. non-scripta.
It is one of around 11 species in the genus Hyacinthoides, others including the common bluebell (Hyacinthoides non-scripta) in northwestern Europe, and the Italian bluebell (Hyacinthoides italica) further east in the Mediterranean region.