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The common snowdrop tends to grow in clusters and appears in various forms. From the bulb, two narrow leaves emerge, and the leafless stem carries a nodding flower. The outer three petals are usually pure white. The inner three are shorter, with a green mark at the tip, resembling an upside-down letter V.
Although the typical snowdrop has three white outer petals, there are also varieties with a delicate green floral dress, snowdrops with two, four, or five outer petals, and others whose flowers resemble those of dogtooth violet or cyclamen.
Snowdrops can still be found until mid-April; in snow-covered and higher areas, they bloom even later.
They appear on the edges of forests and forest meadows. Interestingly, they do not thrive on fertilized meadows. They particularly prefer spots along rivers – even in places where the water frequently overflows its banks. However, the snowdrop is not a swimmer! It does not like constant moisture or stagnant water, which is why it is not found in swampy areas.
In the interior of Slovenia, snowdrops tend to stay in lower areas, while in the Alpine valleys of Upper Carniola, you will mostly not find them – there, their cousin, the spring snowflake, is more common.
Snowdrops reproduce both by seeds and by bulbs. From a single bulb, the following year, division can lead to two, then three, five... new bulbs.
Snowdrops are protected in the wild and are on the list of protected species in Slovenia. It is allowed to pick them for a bouquet, but mass picking is prohibited, and digging up their underground parts is strictly forbidden.