New orders delivered in 2-6 days

(888) 847-8637
Generic filters
Search in title
Search in content
Filter by Custom Post Type
Products
Pages
Posts
Filter by Product Categories
All Bulbs
Allium Bulbs
Apparel
Bulbs for Cutting
Bulbs for Naturalizing
Bulbs for the South
Daffodil Bulbs
All Daffodil Bulbs
Daffodil Blends
Daffodil Bulbs for Naturalizing
Daffodil Bulbs for the South
Double Daffodil Bulbs
Fragrant Daffodil Bulbs
Gold Standard Daffodil Bulbs
Jonquils
Landscape-Size Daffodil Bulbs
Miniature Daffodil Bulbs
Uncommon Daffodil Bulbs
Deer Resistant Bulbs
End-of-Season Specials
Featured This Week
Hyacinth Bulbs
Indoor Bulbs
Amaryllis Bulbs
Paperwhite Bulbs
Peruvian Amaryllises
New This Fall
Paperwhites
Planting Tools
Rodent Resistant
Shade Tolerant Bulbs
Shop by Bloom Time
Early
Early-Mid
Late
Mid
Mid-Late
Very Early
Very Late
Shop by Color
Apricot
Blue
Cream
Green
Lavender
Maroon
Orange
Pink
Purple
Red
White
Yellow
Specialty Bulbs
Color Your Grass™
Crocus Bulbs
Grape Hyacinth Bulbs
Other Spring-Flowering Bulbs
Tulip Bulbs
All Tulip Bulbs
Cubed Tulip Blends
Cut Flower Tulip Mixes
Darwin Hybrid Tulip Bulbs
Double Tulip Bulbs
Perennial Tulip Bulbs
Squared Tulip Blends
Tulip BedSpreads®
Tulip Blends
Tulip Bulb Singles
Wild Tulip Bulbs

Added to Your Cart

Snowflake LS

Order Subtotal: $

View Cart

Snowflake LS

Leucojum aestivum

“LS” is short for Landscape Size. These bulbs are smaller than those of our regular Snowflake, which means fewer flowers in year one. The benefit is that the bulbs are less expensive, making them attractive for large plantings. If planted in a sunny location, they should catch up with our large bulbs in a year or two.

Snowflakes are great for naturalizing. They can handle the competition from tall grass, rising above to produce plentiful sprays of delicate white bells. And they are not afraid of heavy, wet soil; they actually prefer it. Wet or dry, given the sun they crave, they can increase their number as the years pass, becoming a fixture in the spring landscape from Minneapolis to Mobile. Pasadena, too. Our LS bulbs are grown in the USA and shipped loose in crates of 500. Looking for our jumbo-size bulbs? Click here.
Deer and Rodent Proof

End of Season Savings
The prices shown here are 20% off our 2024 catalog prices.

Item # 6048
Height 16—20 inches
Sunlight Full or Part
Soil Average to wet
Flower Color White
Bulb Size 12cm+
?
Bulb size is determined by the circumference around the largest part of the bulb. Colorblends only delivers top size bulbs. Large bulbs produce more or larger flowers than small bulbs.
USDA Zones 3a—8b
?
Hardy in USDA zones 3a to 8b in the South or 10b on the West Coast.
Bloom Time Mid
Bloom times are relative within the spring bulb season, which varies from place to place and year to year. They are intended to help you plan a sequence of bloom from Very Early season to Very Late season. About two weeks separate Early from Mid and Mid from Late. The start and duration of bloom is heavily dependent on the weather. Warm temperatures speed up growth and flowering; cold temperatures slow them down.
i
  • early
  • mid
  • late

$ 0.00

Quantity Price per bulb
500 to 1,500 $ 0.312
2,000 to 4,500 $ 0.28
5,000 to 9,500 $ 0.256
10,000 or more $ 0.24

Bulb Calculator

To find the number of bulbs you need, enter the square footage of the planting area in the box below.

Area

Square Feet

Density

Bulbs/sq. ft.

Bulbs Needed

How Many Bulbs Do I Need?

Planting Instructions

Full sun or partial shade and soil that does not dry out entirely in summer. In the wild, snowflakes are found in damp meadows and on river banks, so they are a good choice for a spot where the soil is less than perfectly drained. Bulbs are slow to go dormant in summer; wait to cut back until the leaves have yellowed.

Depth of Planting Hole 4 inches
Spacing 3 inches apart

Education Center

Recommendations for the South

Many spring-flowering bulbs struggle in warm southern climates. Some do fine despite the lack of prolonged winter cold. Others do reasonably well if prechilled before planting.
Read More

First Peepers – Waltzing Together

Spring might still be waffling with winter, but the first dance is still staged by a few intrepid early risers.
Read More