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
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.
Autumn bell flower. ‘Fairy bell flower’ in German. From August, graceful pearl white bell-shaped flowers appear, often in pairs, on a stem that turns red in the fall. This red colour extends to the ovary at the top of the flower. Various wild...
Native to northern Morocco, on sandy soil on the coast, south of Tangier. Tinge or Tingi is the old name for the city of Tangier. Late in winter, or early in spring, the four to five small, white flowers appear on 45 cm long from nodding stems....
A Russian species found a.o. along the Black Sea, along forest edges on somewhat moist soil. The maroon-coloured, almost black sheath with a creamy-white spadix appears in April-May and spreads a manure scent mainly in the morning. Dark green,...
Intro: 1693. Italian Arum. Origin: Canary Islands, Cyprus, Italy, Southern France, Spain and England. Also occurs naturally in the Netherlands. The tapered leaves have clearly visible white veins. The ‘flowers’ we see on the bright yellow spadix...
An Italian Arum that stands out for its brilliant white marbled leaves. The evergreen leaves combine well with early-flowering bulbous plants such as Cyclamen and Galanthus. This can mostly be admired in the woods on English estates where they are...
Spotted arum. Origin: Large parts of Europe to Ukraine. The leaves sometimes feature purple stripes and speckles. The bract is light greenish yellow with purple specks. The berries form in the fall. It grows fast on a not too dry soil.
The only autumn-flowering species. Native to Corsica, Sardinia and Spain. The spathe is purple on the inside, has a lighter colour on the outside and reaches a height of 40 cm. The spadix is almost black. During flowering, the plant emits an...
Introduced in 1987 by Arum specialist Peter Boyce who found the Arum in south-west Crete. The quite large shiny purple flower sheath is surrounded by dark green glossy leaves. Sometimes the leaves appear before winter. An attractive species for a...
Native to central and eastern Turkey at altitudes of 1300 to 2060 metres. Remarkably, the flower sheath, green-cream with a purple edge, protrudes far above the shiny green leaves, a much appreciated feature. Hardy.
A selection from 1997. Perhaps the most beautiful Chionodoxa. Beautiful large flowers with a cornflower blue exterior and a striking ivory heart. The inside of the petals is blue to purple-blue. Blooms long, six to eight weeks. "Blue Giant"...
A soft pink, large-flowered selection from the 1940's. With sunny weeather, the star-shaped flowers with white eyes are wide open, looking upwards. Also in this shade it is a wonderful harbinger of spring which, like C. 'Blue Giant' received an...
Intro: 1878. Collected by the Swiss botanist Pierre Edmond Boissier (1810-1885) in the Taurus, who named this glory-of-the-snow after his wife Lucile, who died young. Flower stems with one or two lavender blue flowers with a white heart.
Selected by Barr & Sons in 1885. Flower colour: bright white. Good for mixing with for example the blue C. luciliae and then scattering it for naturalising .
Was already recorded in 2008 by R. Huijg, Breezand. A new, distinctive pink selection, great to combine with other spring-flowering bulbs. Naturalises well under deciduous shrubs.
A beautiful large-flowered form with light blue violet flowers to complement the range of glory-of-the-snow. Profusely flowering in March-April. Nice in pots combined with Viola cornuta.
(Named after von Sardus). Origin: Western Turkey. Was introduced in 1883 by Barr & Sons. Each flower stalk has ten gentian blue flowers, with a barely perceptible white eye.
Intro: 1880. Origin: Western Turkey. 15-20 cm tall stems feature four to ten blue flowers with a large white heart. Was offered in previous years under the name C. forbesii, but according to Brian Mathew that name is incorrect.
Introduced by N.C. Ruiter in 1956, therefore calles a Ruiter hybrid. The flowers are orange with a striking deep vein on the outside, the stamens are orange. In the bud stage this eremurus is dark orange.
Native to western and central Tien Shan. One of the short species, easily growing on sandy soil. The relatively small root tubers divide easily and the plant seeds well. The dense flower spike is studded with brown, star-shaped flowers, each petal...
Found en masse in Uzbekistan and elsewhere at altitudes of 2000 metres. The flower stalks easily reach a metre and the flower spikes are studded with innumerable soft yellow flowers. The anthers turn brown in a later flowering stage, giving the...
Intro: 1811. This pure white species originates from the northwestern part of the Himalayas. The flower spike, consisting of many white flowers, easily reaches 80-90 cm, while the average total length of the flower stem is two meters.
Intro: 1871. Origin: Afghanistan and Central Asia. Robustus means strong, powerful. It can get up to 250 cm in height, the inflorescence accounts for about 100 cm of the total length.
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...
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...
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...
A white form of T. violacea. Has the same features as the aforementioned, but is less vigorous. Prolonged blooming period from late May. Fairly hardy. An excellent cut flower. Tulbaghia leaves give a delicious, spicy flavor to a salad.
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...