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Nieuwe Oogst, flower bulbs
The website is once again full of novelties. Thanks to the infinite supply that nature brings with it; a site full of worldly bulbs.
Origin: Northern and Northwestern Iran (Elburz Mountains) and Kurdistan. Intro: 1844. Only 10-12 cm high with a variable flower colour, from mauve to violet with a large yellow base. The flowers are cup-shaped, but open in a star shape in the sun.
Intro: around 1989. Collected in northwestern Iran. This very beautiful little tulip becomes a true eye-catcher in early April. Once the elegant white flowers open, they show a steel blue heart. Award of Merit by the R.H.S. in 1989.
Introduced by Visser Czn. in 1975. Magenta pink flowers with a bronze-green flame on the outer petals. The heart is canary yellow. In the year of its introduction the oriental star immediately received a Certificate from the K.A.V.B. testing ground.
Striking dwarf tulip with intense magenta-purple flowers, the base is striped green on the outside. The large heart has a buttercup-yellow colour. From the hands of Visser Czn, 1976.
Introduced in 1975 by Grullemans, ended up via W. Lemmers at Fisherman Czn. where it was named. The sepals are magenta pink with a green glow on the outside and cyclamen purple on the inside. The heart is buttercup yellow.
This abandonment was found by Kesteloo Bloembollen in a batch of T. humilis 'Persian Pearl'. The outside of the red petals give a silvery impression. When the flower opens, the dark purple-red centre with its yellow base stands out. A beautiful...
Intro: 1879. Origin: Tien Shan (Central Asia) and China where they occur in the Dzungaria - Kashgar area on rocky and grassy slopes. Closely related to T. altaica. The flower colour is lemon yellow with violet hues on the outer petals. The anthers...
Origin: Central Asia (Pamir - Alai, Zeravshan). Collected by Paul Graeber in 1901. The 40 cm high reddish coloured flower stalk is remarkable. The cup-shaped and very large scarlet flowers have a glossy finish. 'Ingens' means huge. On the inside,...
Origin: In the hills near the Tien Shan mountains of Kazakhstan in the Altai Mountains and past the border in northwest China. The one, sometimes three yellow flowers with pointed petals feature reddish spots on the outside, the flowers have a...
In 2009, Dr Ben Zonneveld conducted research on the genome size of wild tulips. For that research, more than 400 wild tulips from Europe and Asia were obtained. One of the species discovered in the study was T. lemmersii from the Mashad pass in...
Origin: high in the mountains of Tajikistan, highly variable but always red. The narrow, corrugated, grey-green leaves have red edges and form a rosette. The wonderful scarlet flower with pointed petals is slightly lighter towards the edge and...
T. mauritiana is a late-flowering species from the Savoys in eastern France. First described in 1858. In 1979, it was Visser Czn who found this little-offered obliteration. The outside of the flower shows a lemon-yellow flame on a primrose-yellow...
This multi-flowering little tulip has yellow flowers with red tips, with on the outer petals a hint of green and orange. The heart and the anthers are bronze. Locations of the variable species are mainly western Turkey, Greece and Bulgaria....
A rather rare species about which not much can be found in the literature yet. Native to the mountains of Tajikistan, closely related to T. orythioides. The large white star-shaped flowers have a yellow centre halfway up the petals and are borne...
Intro: 1885. Origin: Northern Iran and northwestern Afghanistan. A multi-flowering, only 10-15 cm high tulip. When the sun shines, they look like a bunch of 'stars'. The flower colour is white with some violet on the outer petals. Both the base...
A Fusilier was a type of soldier from the end of the 17th century and was named after his weapon, the 'fusil', a flintlock musket. A fancy name for this fiery, multi-flowered little tulip. From every bulb grow five to seven flowers. A cultivar of...
Beautiful warm orange-yellow flowers, several per stem, initially appear low to the ground, but the flower stems keep becoming longer during growth. Striking appearance, but even so just as subtle as a wild tulip. Shogun was originally the title...
Scarlet flowers, appearing in multiples from a bulb, still make this somewhat older cultivar, from the hands of Mr Hoog, attractive. A number of new cultivars have emerged from this slightly taller form with fresh green leaves.
A very exclusive tulip, only suitable for greenhouse cultivation. Normally, the Tulipa forms only one leaf with longitudinal angular fold lines at the top, as it were. The pleasantly scented flower is white with a pink tinge and a yellow centre....
A Neo-tulip. Origin: France, especially near St.-André, the Savoys. A very rare species with large blood-red round petals, the centre is yellow and embellished with olive-green spots. Late flowering, May-June.
T. saxatilis has been known since the early 17th century. At that time it was called 'The Tulip of Candie' (Candie or Candia is the old name for Crete). Reintroduced in 1870 by George Maw. Origin: Crete. Six to twelve green leaves form a rosette....
Intro: 1894. Was found in the Pontic Mountains near Amasya in Turkey. Of all species Tulipa this one flowers latest, late May, early June. The slim, bright red-orange flower grows above the long and narrow shiny green leaves. The backs of the...
Origin: Western Iran and northern Iraq. Named after Otto O. Stapf (1857-1933), a botanist who has studied the genus Tulipa genus his whole life. Dark crimson-scarlet, cup-shaped flowers with a dark violet spot in the heart. That spot is sometimes...
A tulip from Central Asia, especially in the Pamir Mountains. Described in 1971 by Vvedenski in the herbarium Flora Asiae Mediae. One to two flowers appear on the 10-15 cm long flower stalk, white with a yellow centre, mottled purple-green on the...
Perhaps the oldest described species, Rembertus Dodonaeus described the forest tulip in 1568. The oldest depiction in Europe of T. sylvestris is from 1549. Origin: Iran, North Africa and Europe, also in the Netherlands, but probably feral, native...
Introduction: 1933. Before that, it was known under the name T. dasystemon. Origin: Tien Shan. Its four to seven tortuous, shiny leaves form a rosette. The up to six -two or three on average- star-shaped flowers are so close together that they...
Intro: 1875. Origin: Central Asia, Turkestan and northwest China. One of the earliest flowering species. The leaves are grey-green in colour and the 20 cm high flower stem is hairy. The twelve tapered white flowers with oval petals have a...
Intro 1967. A rarely offered species from Iran, Kohsh Jelagh and Haraz valley, Olang Pass in the Elburz Mountains. The long, slender, grey-green leaves stay low to the ground. The flowers are a gleaming warm red, and when they open as a cup, not...
Intro: 1929. Origin: Western Turkey. Named after Edward Whittall who had a nursery near Izmir. The name was already used in 1920 but registred in 1940. This small tulip that blooms in April has bright orange inner petals with a dark glow towards...
A new species from the eastern Chatkal Mountains in Kyrgyzstan, introduced by J.J. de Groot and K.S. Tojbaev. Initially thought to be a form of T. ferganica, but given its different growing conditions - this tulip grows among shrubs in a partially...