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Ambitious Spring Snowflakes (Leucojum vernum) (1 of 3)

From “The Mediterranean and the Near East” in The Plant Hunters by Alice M. Coats:

“Spain was always a country apart, isolated physically by the barrier of the Pyrenees and politically by the Moorish occupation, which lingered till the end of the fifteenth century. The last country in Europe to be botanically explored, it was the first to be exploited by a professional horticultural collector, at a time when gardens were still in a transitional stage, part physic-garden, part botanic-garden, and only incidentally assemblages of ornamental plants.

“The collector in question was a Dutchman, Guillaume Boel (sometimes called Dr Boel), ‘in his time a very curious and cunning searcher of simples, who worked for Coys and Clusius as well as for John Parkinson, by whom he was ‘often before and hereinafter remembred’.

“The references to Boel in Parkinson’s first book (1629) are all complimentary, but in his second (1640) there are complaints that while travelling at Parkinson’s expense Boel had sent seeds to a rival (William Coys), who had forestalled the author with descriptions of the new plants — ‘while I beate the bush, another catcheth and cateth the bird.’ Nevertheless, Parkinson received from Boel some 200 packets of seeds, besides bulbs and ‘divers other rare plants dried and laid betweer papers and the collector could hardly be blamed if they did not all succeed….’

“As this implies, many of Boel’s introductions were annuals, and not all were new; but the plants he sent to England included
Scilla peruviana, Leucojum vernum, Armeria latifolia, Convolvulus tricolor, and possibly Linaria cymbalaria and Nigella hispanica.”

From Seeing Flowers: Discover the Hidden Life of Flowers by Teri Dunn Chace:

“Aptly named spring snowflake, Leucojum vernum, serves up a generous early season helping of tiny, chubby white bells with green accents. Sometimes placed in the Amaryllis family, sometimes placed with the lilies, it is especially valued for its ability to prosper in soggy ground.”


Hello!

This is the first of three posts with photographs of a flowering plant at Oakland Cemetery that always marks the transition from winter to spring in my photography projects. Its most recognized common name — Spring Snowflake — fits that timeline perfectly. It’s also sometimes referred to as Snowbell, because of the flower color and shape; or as St. Agnes Flower, a name connecting the plant to the January 21 Feast of Saint Agnes celebrated by several religious denominations. Its scientific name is Leucojum vernum, and it’s one of only two species of plants in the Leucojum genus, the other being the nearly identical Leucojum aestivum, or Summer Snowflake.

I first photographed and wrote about these plants in 2021 when I found them intermixed with Snowdrops, a plant in the Galanthus genus (see Snowdrops and Snowflakes, Daffodils and Tulip Leaves). Galanthus has since disappeared from Oakland and was probably crowded out by the highly ambitious Snowflakes, whose ground coverage has expanded dramatically each year I’ve photographed them. That 2021 post was one of the first ones where I learned — with the help of PlantNet — to distinguish between species of plants that are frequently confused until one takes a close look at the differences in their appearance. Galanthus flowers, notably, have petals that are more separate (rather than overlapping) and both longer and thinner, described, by me back then, like this: “Snowdrop flowers have petals that look like helicopter blades with only one flower on a stem; snowflakes look like tiny bells and will often produce multiple flowers, clustered near each other, at the tip of each stem.”

Five years later, that description still holds up reasonably well; but you can look at that post if you’d like to see photos that show how different they are. And if you’re really, really interested in learning about Leucojum versus Galanthus, take a look at the 1956 book Snowdrops and Snowflakes: A Study of the Genera Galanthus and Leucojum by F. C. Stern. The author covers nearly every botanical, historical, and gardening difference between the two kinds of plants going back to the 1500s, and includes posthumously published drawings and writings by E. A. Bowles — the celebrated botanist I first wrote about after stopping to photograph a Corkscrew Hazel (Corylus avellana ‘Contorta’) in 2023 (see Winter Shapes: Corkscrew Hazel), subsequently exploring that plant’s history and learning about how Bowles accumulated unusual, often overlooked or underappreciated plants in a section of his gardens that he called his “lunatic asylum.”

According to the book The Little Bulbs: A Tale of Two Gardens by Elizabeth Lawrence, Leucojum vernum — despite being vaguely characterized as having naturalized to parts of Georgia and Florida — is actually not common in southeastern gardens, so it’s noteworthy to find them at Oakland at all. But having observed and photographed these plants for six years now, and having photographed them as early as mid-February fully in bloom, I think it’s accurate to identify them as Spring Snowflakes because their Summer Snowflake relative would be unlikely to bloom before April, especially after atypically cold winters like ours of 2026. And it’s also true that the Summer Snowflake tends to produce more flowers per stem than the Spring Snowflake, which, as is evident from my photos, rarely produces more than three flowers (with an occasional exception) on each stem, and most consistently produces just three.

Here, actually, we have one of the exceptions — a plant that has produced four flowers, one of which was upturned to reveal the flower’s inner architecture. That rarity was of course what caught my eye when I was taking the photos, as it’s the only one in this entire series to reverse the plants’ normal bell-shaped nodding structure and give us a peek inside. Over my six years of photographing these plants and accumulating about 150 Snowflake photos, I only encountered upturned flowers one other time, in 2024. Like the flowers from 2024, this one appears to have become trapped between the pedicels of the other flowers, which is probably the reason it got stuck downside up.

I took this series of photos on a very blustery day, the morning after a series of thunderstorms had passed through the area — late enough in the morning that the plants had mostly breeze-dried but their bells bounced un-photogenically in the wind. One’s patience gets tested in conditions like that (especially with such tiny subjects), but I took dozens of photos from numerous distances, focal lengths, and shutter speeds to end up with enough that were decently focused and sufficient for three blog posts.

While working on the photos in Lightroom, I couldn’t help but notice the contrasts between the plants’ dark green leaves and stems, their dark surroundings, and the white blossoms — which produced a nice glow even on that cloudy day. Unlike most white flowers I photograph, Snowflake blooms are very close to pure white, featuring a complete lack of color pigment that is often present in flowers like, for example, white irises. Having noticed that, it tickled me to read that E. A. Bowles described the plant similarly in his 1914 book My Garden in Spring, where he noted that Spring Snowflakes produced flowers that are “hard to beat for pure white” — something captured 112 years later in photographs, by me!

Thanks for reading and taking a look!








White Chrysanthemum Variations (2 of 2)

From “The Chrysanthemum” in Plant-Hunting in China by Euan Hillhouse Methven Cox:

“As the florist’s Chrysanthemum (Chrysanthemum morifolium)is certainly the most important plant introduced from Eastern Asia…. Like so many of the Compositae, the genus Chrysanthemum has always been a muddled group. This is proved by the Index Kewensis listing no less than thirty-six genera to which various species of Chrysanthemum have at one time or another been assigned; and no cultivated member of the group has a more obscure early history than the florist’s Chrysanthemum.

“Botanists have identified first one, then another wild-growing Chrysanthemum as the ancestor from which all the garden forms have sprung. It is now clear that these cannot be regarded as simple derivatives of one species, but must be accepted as a complex garden group apparently derived from several species with its exact origin shrouded from ken by the passing of time.

“The foundation of this group may be
C. indicum, a misnamed species, as it does not occur in India… although [George] Forrest found it in Yunnan not far from the Burmese frontier. It has small yellow flowers and is widespread in China and south Japan. But evidently other species… have contributed to its immense range of variation.

“Cultivated Chrysanthemums, probably already modified by human care, were introduced from China into Japan in the eighth century A.D., so a Japanese authority, Teizo Niwa, states, and they have ever since been the subject of breeding and selection. The varieties now available exceed 5000. Is it surprising that most of these bear so little resemblance to any one wild species and that their origin should be so uncertain?

“A curious fact about the florist’s Chrysanthemum is that it was in cultivation in Holland about 1688, not in one variety alone but in six, with reddish, white, purple, yellowish, pink and purple-red flowers of great beauty. It was then lost to European gardens for almost exactly a century….”

From “White Chrysanthemum” in Basho’s Haiku: Selected Poems by Matsuo Basho, translated by David Landis Barnhill:

white chrysanthemum:
     gazing closely,
          not a speck of dust


Hello!

This is the second of two posts with photos of the last batch of white and yellow chrysanthemums that I photoshooted (!!) toward the end of 2025 at Oakland Cemetery. The first post is White Chrysanthemum Variations (1 of 2).

As I did with the previous post, I’ve switched between the two varieties I discovered cohabitating in the same section of Oakland’s landscape in the galleries below. Once again, you should be able to readily observe the characteristics that differentiate these cultivars: the lengths of individual flower petals, and the arrangements of flower clusters at the top of their stems.

I included the quotation from Plant-Hunting in China by Scottish botanist Euan Hillhouse Methven Cox at the top of this post because it added some detail to what I described in the previous post: how the florists or garden mums that are so ever-present today can be traced through a long and complex history that includes their movement to Europe (and the United States) from Japan and China, yet they are largely derived from the same two species: Chrysanthemum morifolium and Chrysanthemum indicum.

And I especially liked the Matsuo Basho haiku. It reminded me how my “gazing closely” takes place in multiple contexts: observing the chrysanthemums from multiple perspectives while out in the wilds of Oakland; taking photographs to capture their images from multiple angles and distances; and spending time (sometimes hours) analyzing the images in Lightroom and using its distraction removal and healing tools until I get versions that contain “not a speck of dust.”

Thanks for taking a look!






White Chrysanthemum Variations (1 of 2)

From “Chrysanthemum” in Japanese Gardens by Wendy B. Murphy:

“Chrysanthemums have been cultivated in the Orient for thousands of years, and in Japan they have come to symbolize longevity. A stylized 16-petaled chrysanthemum is the official insignia of the Japanese Emperor, while lesser members of the Emperor’s family wear chrysanthemum insignia containing 14 petals. Possibly because of the mystique surrounding it, the plant has special importance in a Japanese garden. It is often elaborately trained by pinching back and disbudding to form pyramids and cascades of bloom, some of which require extensive bamboo understructures. But it is also allowed to grow more naturally. Few gardens, in fact, are without at least one example of this major flowering plant of the Japanese autumn.

“The florist’s chrysanthemum probably originated in China centuries ago. It comes in many sizes and shapes, but its flowers all have the same basic arrangement: they are made up of a band of outer petals, called ray florets, and a circle of inner petals, called disc florets…. In some, the ray florets curve inward and overlap to form large globelike blooms; these are said to belong to the incurve class. In others, the ray florets curve backward in the manner of the petals of an aster, and are classed as decorative or aster-flowering blooms…. In all these flowering types, the colors range from white and yellow to purple and dark red.”

From “The Chrysanthemum” in The Garden Flowers of China by H. L. Li:

“Probably the most valuable contribution in horticulture from China to the rest of the world is the garden chrysanthemum, one of the most popular of all flowers. Though the flowering season of chrysanthemum is relatively short — about six weeks — its autumn-blooming habit, at a time when most of the other flowers are far past their prime and practically through blooming, is distinctly a most desirable characteristic. Probably no other flower in cultivation can compare with these autumn beauties in numerous forms, colors, and variations of growth. The chrysanthemum’s endless changes in form and color appeal to the interest of all flower lovers.

“The garden chrysanthemum is exclusively of Chinese origin. However, its origin as a cultivated plant and its early history of cultivation in China are a controversial problem much discussed in Western horticultural literature since the early nineteenth century…. Botanists now generally attribute the origin of the garden chrysanthemum… to two species:
Chrysanthemum indicum(or Chrysanthemum japonicum) and Chrysanthemum morifolium.

“Our present garden forms of this flower are the result of crossing and the variation of progenies of these two species. It is generally believed that the small-flowered, hardy garden types of chrysanthemum were derived from the former, and the larger-flowered florists’ types from the latter, of the two species.”


Hello!

This is the first of two posts with photos of the last batch of chrysanthemums that posed for me toward the end of 2025 at Oakland Cemetery.

From a distance — or with a wide-angle shot — these look like they’re all the same kind of plant…

… but once I started working on the photos, I realized I had two different cultivars here. Their colors were the same (yellow/orange centers with white petals) — but a closer view of the flower petals revealed their separate identities. Here we see the two varieties side-by-side, where one variety has produced long, slender petals in just one or two circular rows; and the other variety has produced much shorter petals with multiple overlapping layers. The two varieties cluster their flowers differently, too: each stem of the variety on the left typically produced three to five flowers per stem; whereas those on the right produced a dozen or more tightly compacted crowns of flowers, looking almost like a rounded bouquet or a nosegay arrangement ready to be picked.

While the leaves of both plants sport a similar appearance, their overall height is different: those on the left are much shorter than those on the right. That enabled Oakland’s landscapers to arrange them so they grew as shown in the photos: the plants cascade like a waterfall over the wall between the two varieties, with nature doing as nature does and letting the plants blend themselves together at this boundary. And as an alert viewer, you might notice something else about this grouping: the chrysanthemum Ajania pacifica that I posted about previously (see Ajania pacifica, the Gold and Silver Chrysanthemum (1 of 2) and Ajania pacifica, the Gold and Silver Chrysanthemum (2 of 2)) has been used to create a colorful border for the whole scene, with some of its plants spreading into this sculpted landscape by inserting themselves among the two yellow and white varieties.

As is described in the second quotation above, these two variants are very likely to be hybrids derived from their endemic chrysanthemum ancestors, Chrysanthemum indicum and Chrysanthemum morifolium. Either plant could also be known by several common names — including Florist’s Chrysanthemum, Florist’s Daisy, Garden Chrysanthemum, Hardy Garden Mum, and Garden Mum — that reflect their use in gardens and the florist trades. They’re both so representative of chrysanthemums as a whole that PlantNet doesn’t identify them distinctly; it simply identifies my photo subjects as “Chrysanthemums (genus)” since its cultivars are so many, so common, and so similar in appearance.

But that they’re common as chrysanthemum representatives and prevalent in many gardens doesn’t make them any less photogenic. They look quite striking arranged as a group, even more so with the rich green backdrop provided by their abundant leaves, and with the presence of randomly appearing yellow and orange Ajania pacifica blooms adding even more color contrasts.

Thanks for reading and taking a look!