Description:
Name: Wild Blue Hyacinth
Other common names: Blue Dicks, Purplehead, Brodiaea, Brodiea
Scientific name: Dichelostemma Pulchellum syn. Dichelostemma Capitatum
Color: Purple
Plant seeds: Fall, cold stratify, outdoors after frost, indoors weeks before last frost
Bloom time: April – May
Hardiness zone: 9 – 11
Plant height: 2 – 3 feet
Plant spacing: 2 – 4 inches
Light requirements: Sun
Soil & water preferences: Average to dry
Quantity: 30 seeds
The very showy Wild Blue Hyacinth is a flowering herb native to the western US and northwest Mexico. The brightly colored blooms appear in spring with as many as 15 flowers per head on stalks held above the grass-like foliage. They will attract bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds to your garden. Typically blooming from April to May, they will bloom in March in warmer climates. The plant’s foliage will die down over the summer after they are done blooming, so don’t worry if they seem to disappear. The Blue Hyacinth is very tolerant of high temperatures, drought, coastal conditions, and soil that is sandy or rocky. They are a great choice for naturalizing, as well as for beds, borders, rock gardens, desert landscapes, and containers.
While these plants are only winter hardy in Zones 9 – 11, they will reseed in cooler climates so you can start new plants the following year, and they develop corms which can be dug and stored over the winter and replanted the following spring. These corms were used by Native Americans as a starch in their diets, and they are also eaten by bear, deer, wild pigs, rabbits, and gophers.
Ava Knapp –
Thanks for the speedy shipping.
Ava Knapp –
Thank you for the speedy shipping!!
Pickle Barrel Fancies –
So sorry for my late review. Everything arrived quickly and these were just what I needed! Thanks!
Blue Heron Ceramics and Handicrafts –
We will be adding a Warre Bee Hive to our garden and we rea the Wild Blue Hyacinth is a favorite for bees! Thank you! The seeds look great!