New EU-VAT-Directives:Due to new EU VAT guidelines, the VAT rate of the country of destination must be calculated. If you order from outside the Netherlands, this will affect the total price of your order.
Filter By
Categories
Categories
In package
In package
Availability
Availability
Price
Price
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: 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...
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...
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.
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...
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...
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...
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...
Years ago, Václav Jošt collected a previously unknown Ornithogalum in Turkey. The plant develops to a height of 30 cm and the flower stem bears a screen of up to 40 white flowers. The flowers are green on the outside. The low-growing, grey-green...
A very early flowering species native to the Balkans, Greece and Turkey, growing on dry slopes. The white flowers with a green striped back, emerge from a rosette and stand on 10-15 cm high stalks in a dense cluster. The green narrow leaves are...
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 notable species from South Africa where it is found on moist clay soils derived from igneous rocks in the area of the Bokkenveld Plateau and the Roggeveldberge. First described by Robert Sweet in 1830. The intensely burgundy-coloured flowers...
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.
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...
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.
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.
A Trillium of unparalleled beauty, found exclusively the Siskiyou Mountains, and mountain range in California. Rivale means, growing on streams or water, the place where this species is found. The mostly white flowers, soft pink and even speckled...
An herbaceous creeper plant, native to the Andes, South America. A local nickname for the plant is 'Ladies legs', the slender flowers are said to be reminiscent of pink legs with green shoes. The flowers appear en masse from May among the...
Society garlic, beautiful variegated form. South African bulbous perennial for a sunny spot and with some protection hardy, zone 8. Suitable for in pots, or in the border, but also as a cut flower and as a kitchen herb. The leaves, the flower and...
An exceptional, double-flowered tulip in which the petals are slightly fringed. The petals are cherry red from the heart and coppery towards the edges.
An elegant Triumh tulip. Similar in shape to a lily-flowered tulip. The flower colour is initially pink, lighter towards the edge, fading to apricot pink
A. Vvedensky described T. dubia in 1935 after a Tulipa collected near the Chotan River in the western Tien-Shan at high altitude. Dubia means: with some doubt. The offered form originally grows on the slopes of the Beldersai valley, near Mount...
Tulipa eichleri, as cultivated in the Netherlands, is an unknown species from Central Asia. Clare Benedict is a 1956 hybrid with striking, bright scarlet flowers with a black centre. Great for naturalising in a sunny position in permeable soil.
T. mauritiana is a late-flowering species from the Savoys in eastern France. First described in 1858. In 1979, it was Visser Czn who found this little-offered obliteration. The outside of the flower shows a lemon-yellow flame on a primrose-yellow...
A Neo-tulip. Origin: France, especially near St.-André, the Savoys. A very rare species with large blood-red round petals, the centre is yellow and embellished with olive-green spots. Late flowering, May-June.