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Grape Hyacinth

Muscari armeniacum

Photo by joanbstanley
Published on Project Noah
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33.2072, -96.6675

Field Notes

Description:

Royal blue with a white rim on each flower.

Muscari armeniacum, commonly called grape hyacinth, is an early spring-blooming bulbous perennial that is native to southeastern Europe (including Armenia). It features conical racemes of slightly fragrant, tightly packed, deep violet blue, urn-shaped flowers atop scapes rising to 8” tall in early spring. Each bulb produces 1-3 scapes with 20-40 flowers per scape. Each flower has a thin white line around the rim. Dense inflorescence purportedly resembles an elongated, upside-down bunch of grapes, hence the common name. Scapes rise up from somewhat floppy clumps of narrow, fleshy, basal, green leaves (to 12” long) appear in autumn.

Habitat:

Clumps of these little flowers were naturalized in an opening beneath the trees in a greenbelt area.

Species ID Suggestions

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