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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: 1988. One of many descendants arising from selection work by Mr Visser, St Pancras. The medium-sized flowers have an unusual colour. The outside of the petals is amethyst violet with cream white flower heads, the inside is ivory with an...
This double-flowered Colchicum (introduced by Mr J.J. Kerbert) was created by crossing C. autumnale 'Album' and C. speciosum 'Album'. Each lilac-pink flower often consists of more than 20 petals. It won an Award of Merit as early as 1927 and 1928...
A scarce hybrid of C. autumnale and C. variegatum. The intensely chequered, violet-pink flower pattern is clearly derived from the parent C. variegatum. However, this descendant with slender blue-green leaves is much more trouble-free in its...
A natural cross of C. luteum × C. kesselringii occurring in Central Asia and the western Himalayas. Locations known include Ala-Bel Pass, Chuy-Kirgizstan and Tovil-Dara, Darwaz-Tajikistan. Several clones have been found, some of which have also...
Intro: 1561 (cultivated forms arose after 1753). A species that can be found in many parts of Europe, with the exception of the South and Southwest. In the Netherlands, they are still found in South Limburg and along the Meuse and the IJssel...
A double-flowered white form of C. autumnale with on the heart leaves a touch of pink. This Colchicum already received a First Class certificate from the Royal Horticultural Society in 1872. From one bulb grow several flower stems, causing the...
The white-flowering form of C. autumnale, which was awarded an AGM in 2018 and a Jubilee Certificate from the K.A.V.B. in 2010. The flowers are slightly smaller than those of the pink form, they are nicely scattered, a charming bulbous plant for...
Origin: western Turkey. Named after Professor Turhan and his wife Professor Asuman Baytop, introduced in 1983. One to four globular soft pink flowers with yellow stamens per bulb, the three or four glossy green leaves appear almost simultaneously...
Registered in 2004, but in culture for some time before. In 1991, A.M.D. Hoog received material from J. Zweeris. The heavily chequered, violet-purple flowers are fragrant, but lack the distinctive white throat characteristic of C. bivonae....
Named after botanist Pierre Edmond Boissier. Unlike most Colchicum, C. boissieri forms a rhizomatous tuber. The bright cherry-pink flowers with a fine white streak have contrasting, yellow stamens and appear in autumn, the usually two leaves...
This probable hybrid of C. cilicicum was first seen in Asia Minor in 1597. The broad, strongly ribbed leaves never appears earlier than in spring. From the strikingly large tubers grow twenty purple flowers. One of the best indoor flowering dry...
Synonymous with Colchicum byzantinum 'Album'.
A floriferous, white, sterile form of C. byzantinum, which has become a rarity. Registered by C.P.J. Breed in 2000. Initially, the flowers are soft purple, but in full bloom the flowers become snow...
Intro: 1928. Because of its origin, exclusively in Transcaucasia and Talysh, Dr. Dmitriy Zubov decided in 2021 to keep this taxon separate from C. trigynum and not use it as a synonym as K. Person does. A small, spring-flowering Colchicum with...
An imperial purple form of the in Turkey, Syria and Lebanon common species C. cilicicum. The fragrant flowers are decorated with fine grey-white veins on the outside of the petals. Has few soil requirements and tolerates full sun. AGM in 2018...
C. cupanii is named after the Italian botanist Francesco Cupani (1657-1710). Widely distributed in Greece, Sicily, Sardinia, southern France and Algeria. The offered form is particularly common in Tunisia and is distinguished from the species by...
Intro: 1880. Origin: Turkestan and northeastern Afghanistan, often growing together with C. luteum. A variable species, because of which several clone parties are now available through specialists from Lithuania and Latvia. The petals are white on...
A yellow Colchicum that flowers from February onwards. The origin of this oddity is Kashmir and from Baluchstan to Afghanistan to southwest China. In areas with moist spring and dry, hot summer and autumn. First described in 1875 in the "Botanical...
A spring-flowering species from Turkey, first described in 1999. Exuberantly flowering and amazingly easy to propagate. Small pale violet flowers, black-purple stamens and a dark throat.
Origin: Hungary, Romania. This Colchicum is closely related to C. autumnale and some experts consider it to be a subspecies of C. autumnale, even though the flowers are slimmer and more refined. Is is also offered under the cultivar name C. 'Nancy...
The pale lilac flowers of this species from the Caucasus and Turkey appear in early spring, occurring on dry stone slopes. The petals are narrow, elliptical in shape, at the base there are bright orange spots. The anthers are black and the pollen...
Introduced by the Backhouse Nursery of York. Has won numerous awards since 1900. Perhaps the most beautiful white Colchicum there is. Sturdy goblet shaped white flowers with a soft green throat. The leaves are hairless. From one bulb grow several...
According to E.A. Bowles the best dark purple Colchicum, it had earned its first award back in 1933 and at the R.H.S.'s last trial in 2018 an AGM. The R.H.S.'s highest award given only to the very best garden-worthy plants. A striking, intensely...
The native range of this short-leaved subspecies is from southern Turkey to north-western Jordan. Growing in temperate climates, Colchicum flowers appear immediately after winter, usually pink, pale pink, sometimes white. The range are descendants...
Selected from a batch of C. autumnale collected from Mount Falakros (near the town of Drama) in northern Greece. Probably a hybrid with C. haynaldii. Vigorously growing and richly flowering with lilac-pink flowers, on the inside a clearly...
Found in a cemetery in Cologne in the 1970s. A nivalis with intense yellow markings and a green ovary. After two years in a permanent location, the features come out best.
A small snowdrop, from G. woronowii, with light green, shiny leaves. The pretty little flower has a soft green mark on the inner petals, a green tip on the outer petals.
(Double Group). A beautiful snowdrop with six outer petals and six inner petals, beautifully symmetrically arranged. Godfrey Owen was found in Mrs Margaret Owen's garden around 1996, and named by her after her late husband.
(Imperial Group). As the name suggests, what we have here is a snowdrop that heralds the New Year. Wonderful to find a snowdrop in the garden so early in January, and nice to bring inside in a jar. Was found in a batch of G. elwesii var. elwesii.
A green G. elwesii, flowering as early as December. Initially, the flower is not very large, but if the snowdrop is established for a few years, the flower comes to full development.
this selection from Trym comes from the hands of the highly acclaimed Colin Mason. Even more beautiful because of the special green markings on the outside of the petals. Rare.
(Imperial Group). The third oldest extant snowdrop cultivar. In 1858, Frederick Bedford, head gardener of Straffan House, County Kildare in Ireland, found a snowdrop among G. plicatus that produced two flowers. The name 'Straffan' is not...
(Double Group). Truly a maverick. The partly green, outer petals are very slender and point, somewhat wavy, far outwards, resembling the whiskers of a walrus. The inner petals show a heart-shaped, green patch on the outside. Small plant,...
(Imperial Group). In 1995, Veronica Cross encountered this striking snowdrop in the former Backhouse Garden at Sutton Court in Herefordshire. The appearance of the flower is reminiscent of an insect. Very slender flower shape, the tubular, inner...
One of the taller Greatorex Double, named after a character, a country wench, in William Shakespeare's Love's Labour Lost. It is a snowdrop with sturdy leaves and small short thick double flowers, of which the outer petals are round in shape. On...
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.