Snowdrops and Snowflakes
February
12, 2007 - The snowdrop (Galanthus nivalis) is a much looked
forward to harbinger of spring in eastern climes that comes much later
than their west coast cousins in Vancouver. Most years, by early January
a snowdrop or two is already drooping its modest head in front of the
Park Board Administration Office in Stanley
Park.
This year, small scenic vignettes are taking us by surprise. We are
only slowly awakening from dark days of hibernation but as each morning
dawns brighter our collective hearts quicken a little more, beat by
beat, snowdrop by snowdrop.

Snow drops in Stanley Park re-emerge
beneath a tree blown over in the
December 15, 2006 storm.
Take for instance the usually most unassuming embankment near the South
Lagoon Drive entrance to Stanley Park proper, just past the Park's daycare
centre. Ignored by all who pass 48 weeks of the year, it is now, and for
the next three weeks weather permitting, a blanket of snowdrops. Some
wise gardener (actually
Alleyne Cook, now retired, who received
the first clump from avid Vancouver gardener
Ellen Haley in the
late 1960s) many autumns ago, no doubt, envisioned this loveliness in
his mind's eye as the ancestors of these marble-sized orbs were gentled
into the turf there. It is a shaded place, making the white and lime green
quilt later to arrive and longer in staying. Snowdrops, if left undisturbed,
will seed themselves around so if you're not too tidy, your neglectful
ways will be rewarded sooner. They can be lifted and divided straight
away after flowering to successfully colonize another neighbourhood which
is in want of an early blooming army.
Here is a quote from one gardener's daily journal:
"Last week I dug up a clump of Galanthus from a dear
friend's garden; just large enough to fill a small terra cotta pot
which served as a modest centre piece for my dinner table. Diminutive
and delicate, it virtually gleamed under the influence of golden candle
light while revealing close-up the intricacies of its countenance.
Yesterday I tipped it from its container and replanted it in its new
garden home."
Enjoy all Park Board snowdrops throughout the city, wherever you find
them, and hopefully before a sudden and unpredicted snow storm!