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.
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...
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...
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.
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.