I bless the good fortune, ten years now in the past, that allowed me to find and try a few bulbs of Puschkinia scilloides var. libanotica, commonly known as Striped Squill. I am always partial to the sky-blue Scilla sp. family and I am always on the lookout for species bulbs that will survive the wind and wayward Kansas Spring. These minor bulbs (as Elizabeth Lawrence referred to them) are a match made in the heavens for my garden.
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I didn't know until yesterday that they were also scented, but if you lay on the ground and bury your nose in the clump, they have a very sweet, but not overpowering scent. I am personally put off by the strong odor of so-called Dutch Hyacinths (Hyacinthus orientalis) up close, and can't eat with a Dutch Hyacinth or Oriental Lily smelling up the room, but I appreciate the more delicate scents of these hyacinth-relations. I suppose you could also cut these somewhat waxy flowers and raise them up to your nose rather than flatten yourself down to their level to sample their aroma, but then, that would be cheating and would deprive you of experiencing another world, a little world, where these flowers are the gardening universe of their surroundings.