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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.
One of the wonderfully fragrant and richly flowering jonquil daffodils introduced in 2016 cultivated by Karel J. van der Veek. Division 5. The slightly bowing, soft yellow flowers, appear up to six per stem. Great for naturalising and fantastic...
Division 6. An American selection recorded in 1998. The soft yellow petals have dark edges. The powerful forward-facing cup is golden. Like a mother duck, the higher flowers are positioned above the shorter flowers, a great name for this flowering...
Division 1. Classic white Dutch trumpet daffodil from before 1938. The initially cream white petals surround a light green-yellow trumpet which fades to white flowering progresses. A well-growing and reliable daffodil which is widely used. Mount...
Division 11a. An early-flowering split-corona daffodil, registered by Carlos van der Veek in 2022. The large split, outright orange cup almost completely covers the yellow petals. Even in full sun, the colour remains well preserved.
Completely new is this daffodil by John A. Hunter, also from New Zealand. Similar to the very early-flowering N. 'Polar Hunter', but with soft yellow, fragrant flowers. The petals are creamy yellow from the cup and darker yellow at the tips. A...
Division 11b. A white butterfly daffodil with a slightly frayed, ivory-white crown. Introduced in 1940 by Dutch breeder J.W.A. Lefeber, now classified by the American Daffodil Society among the Classics. Award of Merit in 1962.
Division 7. Intro 1985, by John W. Blanchard, England. An early-flowering, fragrant Jonquille, created from N. atlanticus x N. cuatrecasasii. A striking miniature daffodil with soft yellow flowers and a slightly darker cup.
Intro: 1970. Division 5. G.E. Mitsch, 1970 (Grant Mitsch Novelty Daffodils, Canby, Oregon, USA). A Triandrus type, usually with two or more drooping flowers per stem. The petals are folded back. A cream white, multi-flowering, floriferous beauty....
Intro: 1964, Grant E. Mitsch. Division 7. For years a success on our Daffodil site, where in collaboration with Nursery H.M. Meeuwissen we offer an exclusive assortment of daffodils for the daffodil lover. Snow-white petals, green at the base, the...
Intro: 1977, P. de Jager & Zn. Division 2. Reliable large-cupped daffodil with ivory white petals and a cup which is cream white in the center and coral pink towards the edge. Sturdy plant.
Intro: 1994. Division 1. A trumpet daffodil whose petals open greenish white and turn to white. The trumpet starts light orange and turns to soft pink, very pretty. A Dutch breeding, J. Gerritsen and Son.
Division 7. Intro: for 1947 by Alec Gray, England. Belonging to the Classics, according to the ADS, this wonderfully fragrant Jonquille with deep butter yellow, beautifully shaped flowers is a must-have for the daffodil lover.
Division 12. A unique daffodil from New Zealand (John Hunter 2020), whose parents are N. viridiflorus and N. jonquilla. Flowering starts as early as winter. Each flower stalk produces up to four flowers that are initially green and blush to white...
Division 11. Each flower stalk bears four to five delightfully fragrant flowers. The split golden-yellow cup is enclosed by beautifully contrasting butter-yellow petals. A modern daffodil with a natural look that guarantees eight weeks of...
Intro: for 1908. Division 3. The flower shape shows immediately that we are dealing with a beautiful, historic daffodil. Informal, loose-looking, large, milky white flowers with a yellow crown. Originating from Barr and Sons, England.
Intro: 2008. Division 4. The name might refer to the eleventh prime minister of Canada, or perhaps to Sir Richard Rodney Bennett, a British composer and pianist. Little is known about this beautiful, low daffodil, the unknown hybridiser did not...
Intro: 1946. Division 1. The earliest yellow trumpet daffodil for naturalising. In recent years the Zandvoortselaan, the road between Zandvoort and Heemstede, has already been turning yellow from December. Keeps flowering almost all winter, only...
Intro: before 1884. Division 4. A historical narcissus originating in Ireland. Rip van Winkle is a short story set before and after the American War of Independence, written by American author Washington Irving. Both the sepals and also the...
Division 1. Pre-1952, Robert O. Backhouse, England. I have to try pretty hard to get some occasional offerings of this beauty from the grower. As far as we know, the first pink trumpet daffodil with creamy white, slightly curled petals and a...
Division 7. Intro 1986, J.W. Blanchard, England, created from N. jonquilla x N. rupicola subsp. watieri. A richly flowering, wonderfully scented jonquilla with soft yellow flowers, turning slightly darker towards the dark yellow cup.
Division 4. The wonderfully fragrant, double, pure white flowers of this historic daffodil, pre-1950, appear late in spring. Originated from N. 'Cushendall' x N. 'Smyrna', a many awards winning cross cultivated by Guy L. Wilson, Northern Ireland.
Division 3. A small-crowned, softly scented English daffodil from 1984, by Mrs J. Abel Smith.
Perfectly shaped, facing flowers with a subtle greenish-beige cup, fitted with a dark eye.
Intro: 1962 Mrs. Alec Grey, England. Division 3. The white petals, overlap each other for a third. The cup is green-yellow and ribbed at the end. Unique, a very nice small daffodil.
Division 1. Cultivated by the late Karel J. van der Veek, AGM in 2011. Named after the church of Saint Victor in Obdam. Pastor Paul, an avid daffodil collector, donated this daffodil to the Pope, each spring these bloom abundantly in Vatican City....
Intro: before 1948. Division 6. A cross product of N. 'W.P. Milner' x N. cyclamineus, done by A.M. Wilson. Awarded an Award of Merit twice, in 1953 and 1959. Do not confuse this snipe with Narcissus 'Jack Snipe'. This beautiful cyclamineus has...
Intro: before 1937. Division 4. A Dutch product, G.A. Uit den Bogaard, who won an avalanche of awards in the decades after its introduction. And rightly so, the ivory white petals bend backwards gracefully and the heart is fused into a ball of...
Intro: before 1998. Division 10. An ivory hoop skirt daffodil. The shape of the small flowers resembles a hoop skirt. Named after Hercule Poirot. H. Poirot is a fictional Belgian detective and starred in a book series by Agatha Christie. The early...
Intro: 1960. Division 2. Ultimate perfection pristine, pure white flowers with a flat cup. Its green heart is fantastic. Perhaps the most beautiful daffodil in its class.
Like N. 'Moonlight Sensation' and N. 'Sunlight Sensation' a wonderfully fragrant and richly flowering jonquil daffodil cultivated by Karel J. van der Veek. Division 5. White, slightly bowing flowers, appear up to six per flower stalk. Excellent...
Intro: 2016. Division 5. The golden yellow form of the Sensation daffodils. Delightfully fragrant and richly flowering. The up to six flowers per flower stem curve slightly downwards. Very suitable for naturalising.
Intro: 1956. Division 2. The ADS, American Daffodil Society, classifies this classic with the ADS Classics, daffodils registered from 1940 to 1969. With the aim of encouraging growers to preserve these varieties. White petals, a soft yellow cup...
Division 4. Like N. 'Tête Bouclé' a sport of Narcissus 'Tête-à-Tête' with irregularly double flowers, usually one, sometimes two per stem. Flowers bud as early as March, bright green-yellow, the centre first orange-yellow, later vivid yellow. A...
This daffodil was discovered already before 1949 by the Englishman Alec Gray. Division 12. The well-known 'Tête-à-Tête' which stood in a pot on everyone's windowsill at least once and accounts for more than half of planted daffodils. Fun and good...
Intro: before 1916. Division 5. The pure white, slightly backward curved sepals form a star. The also pure white cup, corrugated at the tip, has the shape of a drinking cup. Three to four flowers per stem is normal. Thalia is often used in...
Intro: 1965. Division 1. A daffodil nice for naturalising. Similar to N. pseudo-narcissus subsp. lobularis. Put on this earth by J. Gerritsen & Zoon. The petals are cream in bud stage and fade to almost white. The cylindrical trumpet is vivid...
Division 11. An unregistered, small, split-corona daffodil, one of Jan de Winter's many seedlings. Warm yellow, fragrant flowers with a nice, frivolous flower shape.
Intro for 1948. Division 3. Alec Gray used N. rupicola subsp. watieri, among others, for this cross. The sepals are pure white. The strongly ribbed, disk-shaped crown is greenish white, to the base green. A beautiful miniature.
Division 1. N. asturiensis is native to the mountain pastures of Spain and northern Portugal. Piccolini is a vigorously growing selection registered by Carlos van der Veek in 2021. Both the cover leaves and the trumpet are golden yellow, where in...
A wonderfully fragrant species that has a range across parts of mainland Italy, Sardinia and a small area in France. Deep golden yellow, shallow trumpet-shaped flowers, up to five, in clusters on a 20 cm tall stem. For a sunny position in...
Intro: 1629. Division 10. Hoop’s petticoat. Origin: Algeria, Morocco, Spain, Portugal and south-western France. The range consists of a large-flowered selection that flowers much better and more abundantly than the species, with several flower...
Enticed by its fragrance and profuse flowering. Three to four flower stalks appear from a bulb with at least five fragrant golden-yellow flowers. Native to Spain, closely related to N. fernandesii. The five detached petals encompass the slightly...
Intro: before 1576. Division 1. According to Michael Jefferson-Brown, author of the book "Narcissus", the "official" name is: Narcissus pseudonarcissus subsp. obvallaris var. maximus. It is a now rarely grown daffodil which is mentioned regularly...
Division 13, Section jonquilla. A jonquil which was frequently used as a genitor. Now mostly forgotten, but remains one of the most beautiful wild forms. Very floriferous, from each bulb grow multiple (six-eight) stems with three to five fragrant,...
Intro: around 1700. Division 13. Has some beautiful nicknames: 'Silver Trumpet', 'The Drooping White Spanish Daffodil' and 'The Swan's Neck Daffodil'. Moschatus means: smelling of musk. This daffodil has been cultivated for more than 300 years....
Striking and unusual in this wild form are the petals that are strongly inflated in the bud stage, like those of a Physalis. This form of Poet Daffodil is found in southern France, near Verigon, growing on moist, humus-rich, well-drained soil in...
Intro: before 1600. Division 13. Also known as old pheasant's eye. It is when almost all daffodils have stopped flowering, that the fragrant flowers of this beauty open. The bright white, lightly backward curved petals surround a green cup with a...
Division 13, Section pseudo narcissus. A geographic form of N. pseudo-narcissus, originally occurring in southern Belgium and northern France. It is one of the earliest flowering daffodils (March), the sepals are cream yellow and the cup is...
Division 13, section pseudo narcissus. In the UK these wild growing, deep golden daffodil is called the Tenby-Daffodil, the national daffodil of Wales. There are several stories circulating about how the daffodil ended up in Wales. The following...
N. viridiflora is an autumn-flowering species, which is stimulated to come into bloom by heavy rainfall after a hot summer. Native to the southern tip of Spain, Gibraltar and partly along the coastline of Morocco. Not hardy in the Netherlands, but...
N. viridiflora is an autumn-flowering species, which is stimulated to come into bloom by heavy rainfall after a hot summer. Native to the southern tip of Spain, Gibraltar and partly along the coastline of Morocco. Not hardy in the Netherlands, but...
N. viridiflora is an autumn-flowering species, which is stimulated to come into bloom by heavy rainfall after a hot summer. Native to the southern tip of Spain, Gibraltar and partly along the coastline of Morocco. Not hardy in the Netherlands, but...
N. viridiflora is an autumn-flowering species, which is stimulated to come into bloom by heavy rainfall after a hot summer. Native to the southern tip of Spain, Gibraltar and partly along the coastline of Morocco. Not hardy in the Netherlands, but...
N. viridiflora is an autumn-flowering species, which is stimulated to come into bloom by heavy rainfall after a hot summer. Native to the southern tip of Spain, Gibraltar and partly along the coastline of Morocco. Not hardy in the Netherlands, but...
Division 13. A species from southwestern Europe. It is a real pleasure to admire this miniature. A very slender and low-growing daffodil with several golden-yellow flowers. For a sunny, warm spot, where the lovely fragrance also comes into its own.
Intro: 1601. Division 4. The double-flowered form of N. odorus. Double Campernelles. The wonderfully fragrant yellow flowers look like roses. In the book 'De Narcis' from 1908 written by D.J.M. Wüstenhoof and R. H. Beerhorst, I came across another...