Mike Dana, Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, Purdue University
The grape hyacinth (Muscari armeniacum) is a mid-spring blooming, perennial bulb. Unlike many other spring-blooming bulbs, it makes an excellent landscape plant for the fall and winter landscape. Grape hyacinth foliage dies back following flowering in the early summer, but grows actively again starting in mid-fall. The foliage will persist through the winter. Depending on how severe the winter conditions are and how much protection it receives from snow cover, it may be an attractive element in the winter landscape right up to the time that new growth begins in spring.
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| Grape Hyacinth in mid-May |
Grape Hyacinth in late November |
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