A richly petalled, fully hardy, winter‑tender snowdrop with softly scented, double white florets—perfect for naturalising or pot‑grown early spring elegance.
A refined variant of the classic snowdrop, Double Snowdrop features elegant, pure-white, fully double blossoms that nod gracefully atop narrow blue‑green stems. Each bloom carries layers of delicate petals, creating a charming pom‑pom effect that enriches early spring displays in woodland glades, rock gardens, or containers.
| Spread | Clump-forming  | 
|---|---|
| Blooms / Flowers | January-February  | 
| Soil | Chalk, Clay, Loam, Moist, Sand, Well-drained  | 
| Height | 10-20cm  | 
| Time to full height | 1-2years  | 
| Position | Full Sun, Partial shade  | 
| Quantity | 25, 50, 100, 500, 1000  | 
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David and Carol –
Just to say how delighted we are wit hthe bulbs you sent us, very speedy service and fantastic quality, we planted them all and most are now in flower various parts of our garden both doubles and singles.
Well done! Takes a lot for us to send an unsolicited review but we were expecting to wait a year to see results!
Anita –
From order to delivery 25 hours! Snowdrops arrived in VGC and as it happened, a dry and sunny morning I was able to plant them straight away. Delighted with them
Miss Jones –
Thank you for my 150 Snowdrops – terrific quality, they arrived on Friday at lunchtime and went straight into the ground and are thriving beautifully.
Your service is first class
Thank you so much
John –
Received these bulbs on Friday, they were of super quality and would like to thank you for the gift of the single snowdrops.
Thanks again couldn’t praise them enough
Elizabeth (verified owner) –
I bought these in February 2019 and planted them in the garden. I understood they would flower from January to March but at the end of January, they are only just showing through the soil. I don’t know if it is all the rain we’ve had, or whether it hasn’t been cold enough for them to grow. Other winter plants, hellebores etc. have been in flower for weeks now. Hopefully, as they get more settled they’ll start flowering earlier in the year.