Camas Lily Camassia

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Camas Lily Camassia

Camassia quamash Silvery medium-blue 6-petaled cup-shaped flowers on strong stalks. Also called Indian Hyacinth, and Wild Hyacinth, this North American native was a dietary staple of the Nez Perce, Cree and Blackfoot tribes. The common name Camas and the Latin name Camassia both come from the Nez Perce word for ‘sweet.’ Formerly C. esculenta, and listed on Slow Foods’ Ark of Taste.

Blooms after most spring flowers are gone but before early summer flowers peak. Deer and rodent resistant. Prefers moist fertile soil around ponds, in light woods, or in the garden, and has the potential to naturalize. Full to partial sun.

12–16" tall. Late Spring to Early Summer blooms, Z3-8. 5cm/up bulbs.



6457 Camas Lily
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A: 10 for $6.80   
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B: 50 for $25.60   
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C: 200 for $92.00   
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Additional Information

Novelties and Specialties

The Royal General Bulbgrowers Association in Holland (Koninklijke Algemeene Vereeniging voor Bloembollencultuur, or KAVB) puts this large group of diverse flowers into a boring catch-all category: Miscellaneous Bulbs. The expensive catalogs call them accent bulbs; some call them minor or dwarf bulbs (even though some of the fritillaries are huge!); Louise Beebe Wilder covered most of them in her 1936 classic Adventures with Hardy Bulbs. Whatever you call them, most are sweet, colorful, and completely welcome in spring.