The sexes are on separate plants and male flowers tend to be more ornamental.
The flowers tend to stand up to weather better than other colchicum blooms.
Litter would have been collected and wild flowers tended to.
They are fragrant, and the flowers tend to be outward facing.
The flowers tend to red and pink, often with a whitish blush outward of the throat.
The flowers they visit often have a strong scent, and tend to be purple, violet, blue, and white.
The small flowers tend to produce small, round, dark, mottled, and brown seeds.
The flowers awaiting the visit of birds tend to be tubular and hanging.
The flowers are yellow and round and tend to grow in clusters at the end of the branches.
The flowers tend to grow at the end of the branches.