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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.
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....
In the Netherlands, A. apennina still occurs sporadically. The tubers offered are from a vegetatively propagated lot, collected at the time near Petrovac in Macedonia. Beautiful ferny, soft hairy leaves, bright blue flowers. Ideal for undergrowth,...
Intro: 1771. The (10 to 20) narrow petals are light sky blue at the bottom, while the inside is entirely white. The original A. apennina occurs in forested areas of southern Europe, among others the Apennines in Italy, but also on the island of...
The first descriptions of this in South Eastern Europe, Cyprus, the Caucasus and western Turkey occurring species date from before 1700. By crossing and lots of selection work the now available cultivars arose. Anemone blanda naturalises well, but...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
In Greek meadows, large-flowered, colourful anemones are still plentiful. They are excellent cut flowers and also combine well with other bulbous plants, as has been the case in recent years in mixed plantings.
Anemones flower longer if the spent...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
Wood anemone (nemorosus means: growing in the forest). A fast-growing, ground covering, rhizome-forming plant that is very wide spread (from Lapland to Italy, but also in Asia and North America). The wood anemone was already known in the 16th...
Intro: 1771. A double-flowered white form of A. nemorosa. The flowers are slightly smaller than those of A. nemorosa 'Vestal' and more irregular in shape. We offer a nice selection.
A semi-double, white flowering wood anemone. A beautiful blue heart appears mid-bloom. Becomes really beautiful when the tubers have been standing on the same spot for a few years.
Vernoemd naar een buitenplaats in het zuiden van Engeland, het huis Leed’s Castle. Dit is de grootst bloemige kloon in de A. nemorosa, zuiver witte bloemen met op de achterzijde een roze zweem. Ze zijn wel twee keer groter dan de normale A....
A showy anemone. The white flowers are surrounded by a collar of fused lighter green petals. The inside often has a bluish glow which is dark near the heart and lighter towards the tips. Lovely.
Een introductie uit Amerika van een Europese species. De bloem bestaat uit twee tot drie kransen witte bloemblaadjes die onregelmatig groen gekleurd zijn aan de achterzijde. In het hartje zijn de goudgele helmknoppen zichtbaar.
This anemone was collected by Frank Waley at the time of the First World War in France. Later he spread it from his garden in Sevenoaks, Kent. Soft blue, large flowers with prominent stamens.
Was introduced in 1870 by Sir William Robinson, an influential Victorian gardener and journalist who saw this anemone in the Botanical Garden of Oxford. Flower colour: light blue, greyish on the outside.
Royal blue flowers, the deepest blue of all cultivars, contrasting beautifully with the dark, deeply cut foliage. Earned an Award of Merit in 1915. The entire plant structure is refined and graceful.
A double-flowered form with regularly arranged golden-yellow petals. The outer petals are green, dark red at the tips. Some of the petals may have a few yellow speckles. A beautiful form of the very variable A. ranunculoides.
Intro: 1596. A particularly attractive anemone which occurs in almost all of Europe with the exception of the Mediterranean. This growth habit of this anemone has some similarities with A. nemorosa. The beautiful deep yellow flowers consist of 5-8...
Intro 1850, probably A. pavonia x A. hortensis, occurring in southern France. Large scarlet flowers. The yellowish-white centre encloses the black stamens, creating a striking contrast. The leaves are less incised than those of A. coronoria, to...
A sweet and rich flowering anemone, the result of a natural crossing of Anemone nemorosa x Anemone ranunculoides. Somewhat variable, still occurs in places where both parents grow together in nature. Soft primrose yellow flowers in March-April....
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.
The wonderfully fragrant flowers of this selection are mainly used in cut flower production, mostly bridal arrangements. But for the garden, it also stands out because of its longer and sturdier flower clusters.
The only lily-of-the-valley with pink flowers. The colour looks best in the shadow, in the full sun it fades. Fragrant in the May. Selected by German Emperor Kaiser Wilhelm, during his exile on the Huis Doorn estate in Doorn.
A hybrid that originates from D. ida-maia x D. multiflorum. It is pink with green. This is a great alternative for whom the red of the D. ida-maia is too fiery. Partly because of its frivolous growth habit, it can be beautifully combined with...
Intro: 1806. Origin: Washington to North Carolina (USA). A bulbous plant with tightly spaced, soft lilac-blue tubular flowers, on top of a leafless 70-90 cm long stem. Flowers very long, superb cut flower and great to combine with perennials in...
Intro: 1870. Origin: California and Oregon, where they thrive in the Redwood forests, mainly on grasslands. The American name 'Firecracker - Flower' is very appropriate: the flower bud borne by 50-60 cm long, crooked stems, bursts into five to...
A beautiful large-flowered species with purple flowers with purple veins. Origin: The Talish Mountains in South Azerbaijan. The available batch comes from material collected near Gosmoljan. G. macrostylum is also found in northwestern Turkey and...
Origin: North Africa and in an occasional spot in southern Spain. The finely incised leaves appear early in spring when established for several years, they emerge above ground as early as autumn, causing no problems in a moderately cold winter....
Intro: 1596. Origin: Southern Europe and Turkey. Bulbous Crane's Bill (Tuberosus means tuberous). The leaves are deeply lobed. On a hairy 20-25 cm high and straight stem develop approximately two cm large flowers which consist of five lobed, pink...
Widow Iris. Intro: 1597. Origin: Southern Europe, North Africa, Israel and Turkey. The long and square leaves appear very early. The fragrant flowers are quite special: the ascending portion of the flower (the standard) is yellowish green while...
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...
Legendary lily from 1957 which was the first lily to be registered in the Hall of Fame of the American Society Lily. She comes from the hands of the American breeder Leslie Woodriff and is considered to be one of the best, indestructible garden...
Splendid dark red flowers. A cross between Oriental lilies and Trumpet lilies. This has produced quite high, but firm lilies, usually with slightly downwards, large, fragrant flowers. Despite the height, the lilies remain upright, so they are...
Extraordinary Asian lily with relatively small, speckled flowers. The petals are separate, initially the opened flowers are white-green while the brown-purple speckles are already visible. As flowering progresses, the flowers turn dark orange. The...
Tiger lily. Spectacular tall plant with large, odourless flowers. The petals are recurved and more or less sprinkled with dark dots. The twelve to twenty flowers per stem flower together to form an airy flower cluster. Beautiful for naturalising.
Madonna Lily. They are found in Lebanon and eastern Israel, although it is assumed that the first specimen were found somewhere in the Balkans. The Romans took this flower with them as a sign of victory, as did the Crusaders in a later period....
Intro: 1889. Irish botanist and dendrographer Augustine Henry (1857-1930) introduced this gently scented species. Origin: Ichange gorge (western Hubei) and Guihoe in central China. Plants found in their native habitat often do not grow taller than...
Tiger lily sent from China to the Kew Gardens in England by William Kerr around 1804. Provenance is Japan, Korea and eastern China, growing in a wide variety of soils. It is assumed that L. lancifolium is actually a hybrid, presumably of L....
Named after Max Leichtlin. This Japanese species has large, fragrant, lemon yellow flowers with many red-purple spots. This beauty, on an about 90cm high stem, can be admired from July, often in airy clusters of more than twelve flowers. For a...
Origin: Nepal to northern India (Himalayas). The bulb forms underground offshoots that can grow up to a metre long. New bulbs are formed on these stolons, so they can form an entire colony within a short time. The broad, lanceolate leaves are...
King's Lily, one of the most beautiful lilies that is also the easiest to grow. They were first encountered in the western Chinese province Szetschuan by Ernest Henry Wilson in 1903. The bulbs that were collected by him were first known as L....
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.