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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: 1808. The original Iris reticulata is found in northern and southern Turkey, northern Iraq, northern and western Iran and the southern Caucasus. Violet-blue flowers with a white honey mark bearing an orange-yellow stripe.
Canadian Alan McMurtrie is famous among Iris enthusiasts for his fanatical interest in Iris reticulata. Thousands of crosses and selections in the most beautiful colours and anomalous shapes have been cultivated by him.
A cultivar by Alan McMurtie. Ice blue, almost snow white flowers, from the heart of the flower deep violet-blue. In the middle of the ice-blue falls there is a bright yellow band surrounded by irregular blue speckles. Becomes a true eye-catcher as...
I. reticulata x I. histrioides var. major. The banner is cornflower-blue. The lip is royal dark blue with a yellow nectar guide on a white surface. The flower is fairly wide.
Intro: 1973. A fun variety that originates from a cross-pollination of I. reticulata 'Cantab' x I. reticulata 'Cantab'. Ivory with subtle green lines. The nectar guide is golden yellow.
Canadian Alan McMurtrie is famous among Iris enthusiasts for his fanatical interest in Iris reticulata. Thousands of crosses and selections in the most beautiful colours and anomalous shapes have been cultivated by him.
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...
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....
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 familiar grape hyacinth. Intro: 1877. Origin: Romania, Asia Minor and the Caucasus. The flower cluster is very compact. The many cobalt-blue bell-shaped flowers have a white edge. The narrow leaves are often longer than the inflorescence .
Intro: 1859. Origin: Eastern Turkey. The two to three greyish green leaves enclose the base of the up to 15cm high plant. The flower cluster can contain up to 60, barely five millimeters large, bell-shaped, densely grouped flowers. Each petal of...
Intro: 1596. Origin: South Africa, France, Central Europe, southern Russia and Southwest Asia. Tassel Hyacinth. Occurs scattered throughout the Dutch dunes. The lower part of the flower is composed of fertile olive-green flowers on short stems and...
Intro: 1858. Origin: Western and Southern Turkey. The well-developed flowers at the top of the inflorescence are light blue, the lower part of the inflorescence is composed of dark sterile flowers. Typically, the plant has only one broad leaf...
Intro: 1568. Origin: Belgium (Meuse valley), France, North Africa and southwestern Asia. The three to six narrow light green leaves can reach a length of up to 30 cm. The flower colour is almost black (very dark), with a narrow bright white edge...
Intro: 1873. Origin: Southern France, Sicily, Sardinia, southern Italy, northern Iraq, south-eastern Turkey and western Iran. The somewhat 'loose' looking about fifteen cm wide inflorescence is composed of 20-30 beautiful and bell-shaped nodding...
Intro: 1884. Origin: northeast Turkey and the adjacent area of the former Soviet Union. Dutch name: broad-leaved birdseed. Flowers in February-March with short-stemmed, slightly conical flower clusters flanked by two to three bright green leaves...
Intro: 1594. Dutch name: ‘knikkende vogelmelk’ (Drooping star of Bethlehem). Originally occurring in southern Europe and southwestern Asia, but now growing wild in many European countries. Prefers a shady and somewhat afforested area. The flower...
Intro: 1594. Star-of-Bethlehem, locally: 'booger'. Origin: large parts of Europe, North Africa, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon and Israel. The linear, grooved and half-upright green leaves have a distinct white stripe. The umbel is composed of about...
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...
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.
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...
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.
Common name: Chilean blue crocus. We owe the name of this beautiful genus to the daughter of the Italian botanist Luigi Colla (1766-1848) from Turin, who was given the freak name "Tecofila" at birth. It is also named after the Italian botanical...
Introduced by Max Leichtlin in 1881. Chilean crocus, selected plants with a violet-purple colour. One, often two flowers appear in succession per flower stalk.
Intro: 1799. Origin: eastern North America where they are found in large numbers in forests, between brushwood on calcareous sandstone soil. The green leaves are usually obovate, sometimes oblanceolate. The large pure white flowers fade to soft...
A genus closely related to Brodiaea and Dichelostemma. consisting of more than thirty species. Triteleia tolerates full sun but also light shade. The soil type may vary from sand to loam, but should be well-drained and rich in nutrients. Perfect...
Brodiaea, A umbel, with about 40 violet-blue flowers, with a violet central vein. The whole is reminiscent of a finer edition of an Agapanthus. The leaves are slightly bluish dark green, 1.5 cm wide and recumbent. Excellent cut flower.
Intro: 1835. Origin: British Columbia, Idaho and California (USA). The flower heads are filled with dozens of milky white, funnel-shaped, upright flowers. The strong yet supple flower stems are about 50 cm high. Blooms in June-July.
It is a richly flowering form, up to twenty-five flowers per flower head, with decorative creamy white flowers that feature a distinctive, purple-violet stripe from the centre flowing out over the petals. Excellent cut flower.
Intro: 1838. Occurring in large numbers in the Tsitsikamma forest, located on the east side of the Cape Province. The dark green, narrow leaves form a rosette. At the top of the stem form multiple clusters of star-shaped lilac-pink flowers. They...
Water plant basket, round model. diameter 14 cm, height 10 cm. Ideal for planting rare, or fragile bulbous plants and then burying this in its entirety.