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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: Corsica, Sardinia, southeastern France, Italy, large parts of the Balkans, Greece and western Turkey. This well-known cyclamen was reported under the name C. neapolitanum in 1538. From the flat tuber with its corky skin grow many 10-15 cm...
Intro: 1601. The flower colour is white, sometimes with a touch of pink. In the wild the white form is rarely found. The ivy-like leaves are decorative marbled and often variable. Hardy to -30 ° C.
Origin: Corsica , Sardinia, southeastern France , Italy, large parts of the Balkans, Greece and western Turkey. In 1538 this cyclamen was reported under the name C. neapolitanum. From the flat tuber surrounded by a corky skin, many 10-15 cm tall...
This beautiful, delicate cyclamen was collected by E.K. Balls near Burujuk, Northwestern Turkey in June 1934. Occurs on rocky limestone soil between the roots of trees (oaks). The scalloped leaves are dark green with silvery spots. The flower...
An almost extinct species that occurs sporadically in the mountains of Lebanon. It is one of the most beautiful cyclamen with large, light pink, fragrant flowers that appear in spring, from February to April. The petals have a clearly visible red...
According to tradition, the first specimens were collected in 1901 in the southwest of Turkey (Anatolia) and imported via the former Smyrna (now Izmir) by the firm Van Tubergen. The dark green, serrated leaves are heart-shaped with irregular...
This pure white, very attractive form was not discovered in the wild until 1993. The fragrant flowers appear in autumn, often simultaneously with the newly formed, beautifully marbled leaves. Hardy to -18 ° C.
Intro: probably 1739. Origin: Rhodes, Cyprus, Crete(?), a single location in southern Greece (near Athos), south-west Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, northeast Algeria and northern Tunisia. From these from December to March flowering species,...
One of the most beautiful spring-flowering cyclamen , known since 1895. Found by the Turkish botanist Dr. Demiriz on Duldul Day in Adana province (the Adanus Mountains) in 1952. The heart-shaped leaves are serrated and purple on the underside....
Origin: calcareous mountain forests of Central and Southern Europe, from France to Poland, Slovakia and Bulgaria to Croatia. The highly fragrant flowers are pink to carmine red, often with a dark glow. The dark green leaves are subtly white...
Origin: northern Mediterranean countries, locally in southern France, the islands of Corsica, Sardinia, Kos and Rhodes and in Algeria. A beautiful Cyclamen that has a gentle fragrance and produces many flowers.
A number of subspecies are known in...
This fairly rare, lily-of-the-valley scented Cyclamen is the only species found in Libya, and even then only in a limited area in Cyrenaica. Unique to the species is that the anthers protrude 1.5-2.5 mm above the flower tube. Pink flowers and...
Pure snow white Spanish bluebells. Perhaps the most beautiful colour to highlight dark places in the garden, for example under bushes. Perfect for naturalising.
Pure snow white Spanish bluebells. Perhaps the most beautiful colour to highlight dark places in the garden, for example under bushes. Perfect for naturalising.
Spanish bluebell, a dark blue selection. The first description of the wood hyacinth dates from 1601. The broad leaves are somewhat pendulous and ribbon-shaped. The round to 40 cm high flower stems are about one third occupied by many nodding,...
Spanish bluebells, fantastic in combination with the ostrich fern: Matteuccia struthiopteris. The first description of the wood hyacinth dates from 1601. The broad leaves are somewhat pendulous and ribbon-shaped. The round to 40 cm high flower...
Bluebell. This species has been known since the Middle Ages. Although the original sites can be found in northwestern Italy and southeastern France, we find the harebells wild in most of Europe. The glossy green leaves are quite wide and...
Bluebell. This species has been known since the Middle Ages. Although the original sites can be found in northwestern Italy and southeastern France, we find the harebells wild in most of Europe. The glossy green leaves are quite wide and...
Bluebell. This species has been known since the Middle Ages. Although the original sites can be found in northwestern Italy and southeastern France, we find the harebells wild in most of Europe. The glossy green leaves are quite wide and...
A cross between H. non-scripta x H. hispanica. It is assumed that this is the wild hyacinth found in the Netherlands. Here is a fantastic white form, which received a Certificate at the Test Garden in 2012. The flower stalks, from which the white...
Intro: 1753. Origin: large parts of Europe (including the British Empire), North Africa and West Asia. As the name implies, this is a species that blooms in late summer or autumn (autumnale) flowering. The narrow and grassy leaves appear before...
A tall Scilla registered in 2019 by De Schüllhorn Nursery. The elongated flower cluster, up to 40 cm long, bears many small violet-blue flowers attached to the flower stem on three-centimetre-long stalks. The leaves are green and upright....
Native to central and south-eastern Europe, especially in the Tyrol and native to France. Known since 1596. Several flower stalks develop from each bulb, reaching 15 cm in height, each with three to five star-shaped, bright blue flowers. Until...
Intro: 1568, in the Netherlands since 1594. Origin: Central and Southern Europe and Asia Minor. An early flowering (March) and fragrant species. The sheathing leaves are often two in number (bifolia) and placed on one side of the flower stalk....
Several pink forms of Scilla bifolia are known, from almost white to deep pink. Not all are reliable, strong-growing clones. The offering concerns a beautiful soft pink form, in culture since 1601 and great for naturalising
Intro: 1827. Origin: Dalmatia, the former Yugoslavia and the Western Balkans. The only 15 cm tall flower stem, surrounded by dark green narrow leaves, carries 15 to 70 star-shaped soft lilac to lavender blue flowers, positioned close together and...
Native to the mountains of southwestern Turkey. The bright sky-blue flowers appear up to five per flower stalk. Often three flower stalks per bulb. Somewhat similar in growth and vigour to S. sibirica, but distinctive in colour. For a cool...
A very early-flowering Scilla, originally occurring in the mountains of northeastern Turkey, above Lake Van. This beautiful Scilla was discovered in 1979 and initially as an unknown species, the Botanical Garden in Gothenburg hung the label Scilla...
Intro: 1931. Origin: northwest of Iran (Tabriz) and the Caucasus. The few leaves are narrow and line to duct-shaped. The flower clusters, which seem to grow directly from the ground, consist of star-shaped, somewhat nodding, very light blue...
Native to Central Asia, mainly in the Pamir-Alay and Ala Tau Mountains in Kyrgyzstan. The most beautiful form originates near Kugart. Three to six greyish white flowers with a hint of blue in a fine cluster. Reminiscent of Puschkinia. Needs a dry...
(Synonym: Barnardia japonica). A Scilla native to China and Japan, whose leaves develop late summer, just before the flower spikes appear. The purple-pink star-shaped flowers are only 5 mm and are densely packed. Besides being said to be...
Intro: 1796. Origin: Southeast Europe, the Caucasus, Anatolia and southeast Asia. The bright blue, nodding, star- to bell-shaped flowers are marked on each petal by a dark blue central vein. The best-known Scilla, very suitable for naturalising.