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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.
Intro: 1765. Origin: Pyrenees, Alps (Switzerland, northern Italy, Austria, Germany and northern Balkans). A rarely offered species with smaller white flowers.
Intro: 1765. Origin: Pyrenees, Alps (Switzerland, northern Italy, Austria, Germany and northern Balkans). A rarely offered species. Colour is variable, from pale to dark purple mostly with a dark spot at the tips of the petals.
Intro: 1826. Origin: southern Turkey, western Syria and Lebanon where they occur on the mountains around Beirut. Vitellinus means: the yellow of an egg yolk. The softly scented yellow-orange flowers are funnel-shaped with occasional bronze or...
An exuberantly flowering crocus with an average of ten flowers from a tuber. The inner petals are white, while the soft blue outer three petals are sprinkled with violet speckles. Crocus weldenii is found in dry grassland and rocky areas in...
Intro: 1962. Willem van Eeden called this crocus vain. The outer side of the flowers is ivory with light blue spots on the underside of the petals. The inside is white, greyish white towards the heart. Wonderful orange stamens with soft orange...
A hybrid of Crocus reticulatus x Crocus angustifolius, won by Leonid Bondarenko. Floriferous with large, on the inside golden yellow flowers, the outside is cream coloured with purple stripes. A sterile clone which grows well.
C. x leonidii was created by crossbreeding work by Leonid Bondarenko between C. reticulatus x C. angustifolius. Early-flowering, well weather-resistant crocuses. The flowers are sterile. 'Little Amber' is mustard yellow with narrow dark purple...
Introduced by N.C. Ruiter in 1956, therefore calles a Ruiter hybrid. The flowers are orange with a striking deep vein on the outside, the stamens are orange. In the bud stage this eremurus is dark orange.
Native to western and central Tien Shan. One of the short species, easily growing on sandy soil. The relatively small root tubers divide easily and the plant seeds well. The dense flower spike is studded with brown, star-shaped flowers, each petal...
Found en masse in Uzbekistan and elsewhere at altitudes of 2000 metres. The flower stalks easily reach a metre and the flower spikes are studded with innumerable soft yellow flowers. The anthers turn brown in a later flowering stage, giving the...
Intro: 1811. This pure white species originates from the northwestern part of the Himalayas. The flower spike, consisting of many white flowers, easily reaches 80-90 cm, while the average total length of the flower stem is two meters.
Intro: 1871. Origin: Afghanistan and Central Asia. Robustus means strong, powerful. It can get up to 250 cm in height, the inflorescence accounts for about 100 cm of the total length.
Intro: 1573. Lapwing flower, occurs in almost all of Europe. It is a native plant. Ideally suited for naturalising. The leaves are oblong. The flower stalk almost always has one bell-shaped flower per stem, but the longer the plants are fixed in...
Intro: 1974. Origin: eastern Turkey, northern Iraq and western Iran. A few shiny green and narrow leaves envelop the ca. 25 cm tall flower stem. The inflorescence consists of bell-shaped nodding flowers, purplish in colour and enveloped in a green...
(Imperial Group). If you could only choose one cultivar you should take this one. This is a superb snowdrop. The flower stalks are more than 30 cm long and the large flowers have beautiful convex outer petals. The inner petals have V-U-shaped...
Intro: 1594. Origin: large parts of Europe and southwestern Asia to northern Iran, rare in Belgium and the Netherlands (Stinzen plant). Needs to be planted in a moist spot. The leaves appear during the winter months, frost does not affect them....
The available Leucojum aestivum 'Gravetye Giant' is a large flowered clone. The up to six nodding bell-shaped and bright white flowers have very distinctive pale green spots at the end of the sepals. This plant that flowers in May-June prefers...
Intro: 1420. Origin from Belgium to Poland and from the Pyrenees to the former Yugoslavia. Grows wild in the Netherlands, southern England and Denmark. The fragrant flowers are creamy white with green dots on the flower buds if the species is...
The famous grapehyacinth. Intro: 1877. Origin: Romania, Asia Minor and the Caucasus. The flower cluster is very compact. The many cobalt blue bell-shaped flowers are edged with white. The narrow leaves are often longer than the inflorescence.
Well-naturalising grape hyacinths with only one or two leaves. For sun to partial shade, few soil requirements. 100-120 pieces per m2. Bulb size: 5 cm.
Oxalis hirta is autumn-flowering in our region. A South African species, occurring on slopes and plains in the north and south-west of the Cape. In the habitat, the flowering period is from April into June. The selection 'Gothenburg', cultivated...
Striking South African species, already known since 1774. The white flowers have a strongly contrasting red border. The flowers, which bloom well into the winter, are at their best in a half-open state, when the spiralled petals have a candy cane...
Intro: 1808. Origin: West Asia and the Caucasus. The flower clusters consist of about ten star and bell-shaped light blue flowers with a blue-green midrib. Suitable as undergrowth and naturalises well.
The pure white form of Puschkinia scilloides var. libanotica. Origin: Turkey, Hakkari, near Yuksekova at 2000 meters altitude. Very attractive when they are planted in large numbers, similar to how they grow in the wild.
Plant for naturalising with light porcelain blue flowers. For well-drained, nutrient-rich soil, sun to partial shade, perfect as undergrowth. 100-120 pieces per m2. Bulb size: 5 cm.
Star Hyacinth, bulb of the year 2010. Fantastic for large areas under trees, in the grass or along shrubs. Sun to partial shade, no preferred soil. 100-120 pieces per m2. Bulb size: 7cm.