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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.
White, low-growing Iris with light blue, dark blue and violet stripes. Intro: 1808. The original Iris reticulata occurs in northern and southern Turkey, northern Iraq, northern and western Iran and the southern Caucasus.
Named after one of the 'Hoog' ladies. The banner is violet, the lip dark purple with white spots and a yellow nectar guide. Won an Award of Merit in 1953 and 1979.
In recent years, there has been a lot of innovation in the field of dwarf iris. Old varieties are disappearing, especially in the Reticulata group, and new, healthy varieties are being introduced. So is this ice-white iris derived from Iris...
Intro: 1808. The original Iris reticulata is found in northern and southern Turkey, northern Iraq, northern and western Iran and the southern Caucasus. Purple flowers.
From the hands of Allen McMurtrie comes this very notable newcomer. In the Spotlight! Gorgeous, purple speckled white with falls with a hint of yellow, more intense towards the tips. The standards are a royal purple.
Beautiful bicoloured Iris, white with yellow. The falls are bright yellow lightening to cream at the edge. Highlighted by a few large green blotches. The standards are white, with pale green ribs (sometimes dotted), hair-like.
Intro: 1977. Originated from a cross performed by Tom Wilkes, of Iris 'Persian Pansy' x Iris korolkowii. Dushanbe is the capital of Tajikistan. A beautiful Iris, belonging to the Regelio-Cyclus Group whose flower consists of brownish-red...
Ixia paniculata is native to moist sand plains in the northwest and southwest of the Cape. The cultivar 'Eos' is named after the goddess of the dawn in Greek mythology. Each stem produces at least 15 soft apricot yellow flowers. The star-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...
Legendary lily from 1957 which was the first lily to be registered in the Hall of Fame of the American Society Lily. She comes from the hands of the American breeder Leslie Woodriff and is considered to be one of the best, indestructible garden...
Splendid dark red flowers. A cross between Oriental lilies and Trumpet lilies. This has produced quite high, but firm lilies, usually with slightly downwards, large, fragrant flowers. Despite the height, the lilies remain upright, so they are...
Extraordinary Asian lily with relatively small, speckled flowers. The petals are separate, initially the opened flowers are white-green while the brown-purple speckles are already visible. As flowering progresses, the flowers turn dark orange. The...
Tiger lily. Spectacular tall plant with large, odourless flowers. The petals are recurved and more or less sprinkled with dark dots. The twelve to twenty flowers per stem flower together to form an airy flower cluster. Beautiful for naturalising.
Madonna Lily. They are found in Lebanon and eastern Israel, although it is assumed that the first specimen were found somewhere in the Balkans. The Romans took this flower with them as a sign of victory, as did the Crusaders in a later period....
Intro: 1889. Irish botanist and dendrographer Augustine Henry (1857-1930) introduced this gently scented species. Origin: Ichange gorge (western Hubei) and Guihoe in central China. Plants found in their native habitat often do not grow taller than...
Tiger lily sent from China to the Kew Gardens in England by William Kerr around 1804. Provenance is Japan, Korea and eastern China, growing in a wide variety of soils. It is assumed that L. lancifolium is actually a hybrid, presumably of L....
Named after Max Leichtlin. This Japanese species has large, fragrant, lemon yellow flowers with many red-purple spots. This beauty, on an about 90cm high stem, can be admired from July, often in airy clusters of more than twelve flowers. For a...
Origin: Nepal to northern India (Himalayas). The bulb forms underground offshoots that can grow up to a metre long. New bulbs are formed on these stolons, so they can form an entire colony within a short time. The broad, lanceolate leaves are...
King's Lily, one of the most beautiful lilies that is also the easiest to grow. They were first encountered in the western Chinese province Szetschuan by Ernest Henry Wilson in 1903. The bulbs that were collected by him were first known as L....
Introduced by Jenny Robinson, from Cyprus. registered in 2004 as a selection of M. neglectum. The very light ice-blue flowers appear from a lime green flower bud, a truly beautiful colour combination. Fragrant.
A double-flowered form of Muscari 'Peppermint', found at De Schüllhorn Nursery. Full, pyramidal clusters of fragrant flowers in various shades of delicate soft blue, as flowering progresses its colour changes to almost white.
Selected by M. Philippo. Belongs to the species M. armeniacum, given the appearance and growth habit. Elongated leaves which lay flat on the ground. Soft blue flowers in 8 cm wide clusters, whose tip changes to a silvery white during flowering....
Intro: 1966. Division 10. A well-growing form of N. romieuxii subsp. romieuxii with beautiful soft yellow, outward bulging flowers. Selected by J.C. Archibald in 1966 from a wild collection of Moroccan origin.
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...
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....
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...
Cheerful dwarf tulip whose purple-pink flowers show off a striking cornflower-blue heart. Around the blue heart is a pale pink circle. At the time from the I.V.T. in Wageningen and registered by W. van Lierop & Zn. in 1991.
Another dwarf tulip from the I.V.T. at Wageningen and registered by W. van Lierop & Zn. in 1991. Beautiful warm orange flowers with a purple-black centre surrounded by a buttercup-yellow circle. There is a green blush on the outside of the petals.
Intro: 1971. The original T. bakeri is native to Crete. The powerful cultivar has rounded petals, pink lilac in colour with a large round yellow heart on the inside. The outer leaves are pastel-coloured mauve. Uncomplicated, a nice garden tulip.
A salmon-coloured pride from the hands of J. de Winter, registered in 1999. Received a Certificate of Approval from the Trial Garden K.A.V.B. in the same year. Salmon orange flowers with a warm orange blush.
Intro: 1802, , descriptions date from the 16th century. Lady Tulip or Candy Tulip. Origin: Northeast Afghanistan and Kashmir (growing wild in some places), southern France and the Greek islands. In Europe they were spread by hitchhiking in the...
Intro: 1969. This higher selection won many certificates, among others at the Floriade Amsterdam of 1972. The three outer petals are carmine red, the three inner petals are sulphur yellow. The inside of the flower is yellow with yellow anthers....
Native to northern Afghanistan, collected by Professor Tom Hewer and Grey Wilson in 1969. Brought to market through Wageningen by L.W.D. of Raamsdonk. A very alluring little tulip with shiny yellow flowers that have a red flame on the outer...
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.
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...
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.
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....