5 Camassia Cusickii Bulbs,wild Hyacinth,heavenly Blue Florets Adorn - Fall Bulb, Now Shipping !

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Description

Camassia cusickii Plant/Bulb Camassia cusickii, common name Cussick's camas, is a species of plant in the Asparagaceae family. It is native to parts of North America. It has linear leaves with parallel venation and flowers in parts of three. Camassia Cusickii also known as Wild Hyacinth have tapering spikes of heavenly blue florets adorn these easy going plants. In USDA zones 5-7, they will not need to be lifted during dormancy. Plant them in well-drained soil in a full sun position. A Pacific Northwest U.S. native that's been cultivated commercially in the Netherlands for a long time, C. cusickii is best grown in moist, fertile soil in full sun to partial sunlight. Unlike most bulbs, it prefers soil that has a bit more moisture. Deer- and rodent-resistant, C. cusickii forms ever substantive clusters of linear strappy foliage around upright racemes studded with dozens of six-petaled, 2", star-shaped pale wisteria-blue flowers with yellow anthers and whisper-green centers. The flowers open sequentially from the bottom to the top. Commonly known as the Wild Hyacinth, Camass, Quamash or Leichtlin's camass, C. cusickii, circa 1888, is incredibly valuable since it naturalizes well when left undisturbed in a good spot, and since it blooms in the blank period between the big Narcissus and Tulip spring show and the big summer show when perennials and annuals hit their colorful strides. As it matures over time, when it's happy where it's planted, it naturalizes by bulb offsets (called bulbils: baby bulbs on the sides of the mother bulb you've planted).You'll need four bulbs per square foot. (Square footage is determined multiplying the planting site's length times its width.) Bulb size: 14 cm/up. Full to partial sunlight. Height: 24" to 30". Bloom time in horticultural zone 5: May/June. Plant 5" deep and 5" apart. If it's planted near a stream or pond, make sure to plant it above the high water mark.