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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: Iran near Isfahan, on wet, loamy meadows at 2500-3000 meters altitude. The plant resembles a floriferous F. michailovskyi, but the flowers are shorter and slimmer and the flower stem is longer. The bell-shaped flowers are dark brown to red...
Origin: grows on screes in Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Afghanistan, northern Pakistan and Kashmir to far into China. The oppositely disposed, ellipse-shaped leaves are green-grey and are attached to a 25 to 30 cm high stem. The pagoda-shaped flowers,...
Superb selection in which the outside of the flower shows a purple blush, the inside is lime green with a dark eye. In spring, the flower cluster with buds appears just above the ground. Pretty soon the stem lengthens and the pagoda-shaped flowers...
Origin: Uzbekistan through Afghanistan to northern Iran, and in the Kara-Tau Mountains in Kazakhstan. They can be found around Tashkent and Chimgan. The very beautiful, soft pink flowers are characterised by a wide purple circle around the...
A species found in the Katarpas, a mountain pass in the Pindus Mountains, northern Greece, at more than 1,500 metres altitude. At this altitude, summers are moist, making this species suitable for the garden. Up to three large, jade-green,...
F. thunbergii has a kind of adhesive tendrils at the leaf tips, with which it keeps itself standing among bamboo in the wild. When planted near shrubs, Fritillaria will cling to the branches with its adhesive tendrils. The flower stem bears about...
Fox grape. Intro: 1974. Origin: eastern Turkey, northern Iraq and western Iran. Several glossy green, narrow leaves envelop the 25 cm high stem. The inflorescence is composed of bell-shaped nodding flowers which are purple in colour and enveloped...
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...
A European species, the gladiolus called 'Whistling Jack' in England, also marketed as 'True species'. Magenta purple-red flowers appearing in long flower spikes from May onwards. Wild occurring in the fields in Cornwell and awarded an Award of...
Gladiolus carneus has a wide distribution in the winter rainfall region of southern Africa and occurs in a variety of habitats. It is a variable species. The offered form has proportionally rather large, white flowers with a purplish-red throat....
I am not sure whether we are dealing with a form of G. italicus (G. segetum) or a from seed selected form of G. communis subsp. byzantinus. A range of hardy and easy growing gladioli is well-suited in the border between the perennials. Pale...
Freely translated: Marsh Afrikaner. The marsh Afrikaner, a species occurring in dense populations on wet plains, along riverbeds and swamps. The fragrant, sulphur-yellow flowers appear from May on flower spikes up to 70 cm high. The leaves are...
A selection of recent origin, 2003. The first pink-flowering ipheion, from Washfield Nurseries, found in seedlings of I. uniflorum 'Wisley Blue'. Soft pink, fragrant flowers with a dark vein on each petal. Good growing.
An Ipheion with dark blue flowers selected from Ipheion uniflorum 'Rolf Fiedler. Was registered in 2003 and has proven itself as an excellent flowering pot plant. Good for naturalising.
Large amounts of bright blue flowers, with clearly contrasting stamens and a sweet, mild fragrance. Interestingly, the shape of the flower can vary. A good selection that naturalises well.
I. uniflorum was introduced in 1832. Origin: Southern Brazil, Uruguay, Argentina and Peru, where they occur in large numbers in meadows and grasslands as well as on rocky terrains. They thrive in full sun. Crushed leaves have a mild onion flavor,...
Intro: 1981. Collected by Dr Rolf Fiedler as Beauverdia sellowiana in Patagonia, Argentina. In its native habitat, Nothoscordum grows in full sun on powdery sandy soil. Was presented at the Royal Hortical Society in London in 1984 as: Ipheion...
A species discovered in 1976 by Brian Mathew and Baytop, named three years later. The only site found so far is in south-west Turkey, near Fethiye on the edge of cedar forests. The lovely, fragrant white flowers appear in winter, preceded by the...
In oktober verschijnen de grote goudgele bloemen vlak boven de grond zonder blad. Het blad wordt pas in het voorjaar gevormd en kan tot 30 cm lang worden. Inheems in Zuid-Turkije, zuidelijk tot Israël en oostelijk tot Iran, groeiend op steile...
Native to Karpathos, one of the twelve islands of the Dodecanese. First described in 1990. A fairly hardy miniature, which looks like a smaller version of S. lutea. Numerous bright yellow, slender flowers with elegantly protruding pistil and...
Autumn-flowering. Native to many parts of the Mediterranean region. The dark green, shiny leaves with a greyish midrib appear immediately before or during flowering. Wonderful golden yellow star-shaped flowers with a 3 to 5 cm diameter....
A spring-flowering Sternbergia, native to rocky slopes in among others Iran, the Kopet Dag to the Caucasus, Turkey and Syria. Collected from the northernmost population in Armenia. The yellow flowers have slender petals making them look like...
A hybrid created from a cross of S. vernalis x S. candida, with S. vernalis being the pollen donor. The result is a large-flowered, spring-flowering Sternbergia in a beautiful soft lemon-yellow hue.