
On a walk with garden staff members today we spotted the first snowdrop (or the last, depending on how you define it). This snowdrop variety, Galanthus ‘Potter’s Prelude’, is the earliest of the minor bulbs to flower in the Winterthur garden.
December 3, 2008 by Chris Strand

On a walk with garden staff members today we spotted the first snowdrop (or the last, depending on how you define it). This snowdrop variety, Galanthus ‘Potter’s Prelude’, is the earliest of the minor bulbs to flower in the Winterthur garden.
Hi Chris! I found this blog through the Scott Arboretum blog which referenced it recently. I wonder if all your Greenspring brethren know about this; i will send the link to Donna Stecker! Keep writing so we can all vicariously enjoy your views! (:
bev rogers; former Greenspring volunteer
(former because I just moved to Anne Arundel County; now at Londontown Gardens!)
Good find! Where is it? On the March Bank? Has anyone seen others yet?
[...] Because this flower is so beloved, in 2007 Scotland held its first Snowdrop Festival. In the UK and Ireland there are many gardens that open early just to showcase their snowdrops. Gardens such as: Brandy Mount, New Alresford, Hampshire, England which has the (NCCPG) National Plant Collection of Snowdrops or Primrose Hill, Lucan, County Dublin, Ireland or Cambo Estate, Fife, and Finlaystone, Renfrewshire both in Scotland. In the US, this GardenLady’s favorite garden to see Galanthus in bloom with other early spring bulbs, is Winterthur in Deleware. [...]