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.
Contents: 25 Muscari 'Baby's Breath' + 25 Ipheion 'Alberto Castillo'.
Because several flowers from one bulb flower one after the other, the Ipheion has a very long flowering period. Muscari Baby's Breath returns incredibly well and, unlike other...
Intro: 1975. Origin: northwest Turkey at 1700 m altitude, near Lake Abant where it usually grows together with C. ancyrensis. Very pretty light blue flowers with a contrasting yellow base. Very resistant to fickle weather conditions.
Intro: 1868. C. alatavicus is found near melting snow in mountain meadows at altitudes of 1100-2400 metres. Its range extends from Tashkent in Uzbekistan to eastern and westernmost China, the only species naturally occurring there. White flowers...
Of European origin, on mountain pastures in Bulgaria, Serbia, Macedonia and northern Greece. Recognisable by its white throat, there are deep purple blushes on the outside of the flower. A somewhat later-flowering crocus and a very reliable...
Intro: 1879. Origin: Western Turkey. Named after the French botanist Benjamin Balansa (1825-1891), who visited Turkey many times. A sublime crocus with dark orange flowers, coloured chocolate brown to bronze on the outside. Orange Monarch is a...
This profusely flowering form was found in a batch of seedlings of Crocus biflorus subsp alexandri 'Major'. In the heart of the flower there is a yellow circle, the outside of the petals are intensely violet feathered from the bottom, becoming...
Intro: 1629. Scottish crocus. Origin: Italy, Sicily and Rhodes, as well as northwestern Turkey. A sublime crocus with white sepals with on the outside violet stripes.
The variable subspecies has a wide range, northwestern Iran, northern Iraq and Turkey. The attractive violet-blue flowers with a yellow throat and yellow anthers are darkly feathered on the outside.
Introduced by Mr M.H. Hoog. Collected in the mountains near Uschak, Turkey. Here it blooms very early and abundantly with orange-yellow-tinged flowers.
Crocus concinnus is found on the south side of the mountain range in Kuyucak Daglari in Antalya, Turkey. Concinnus means: beautiful, elegant, a good description about this selection by Václav Jošt. The soft blue flower has dark veining on the...
C. dalmaticus was first written about in 1840. Its range is wide: Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro and northern Albania, extending along the Adriatic coast. The inner petals are bright lilac, the outer ones brownish yellow. Of course,...
A seedling of C. heuffelianus selected by Dirk Schnabel. White with brilliant purple markings. C. heuffelianus occurs in a wide area of the Balkans, Austria and in northeastern Italy, in grassy clearings and in wooded areas.
Intro: 1880. Origin: Tashkent and Turkestan. Named after its 'discoverer' General Korolkov. C. korolkowii belongs to the so-called 'Central Asian Trio': C. michelsonii, C. alatavicus and C. korol-kowii. The offered beautiful clone has golden...
In April 2007 Sjaak de Groot encountered a white form between thousands of yellow C. korolkowii in the Varzob Valley, Tajikistan. This batch does not descend from the crocus that was found there, but the story confirms that a white form can be...
Found in Malatya, a province in Turkey where cold winters with lots of snow occur, followed by hot and dry summers. The soft lilac flowers have a pink hue, the petals are slender. The throat and anthers are yellow.
C. rujanensis is native to Serbia and Macedonia, on Mount Rujen, near the town of Buljanovac and grows there in oak and hornbeam forests, under thickets and in grasslands. Described in 1989 and not easily distinguished from C. dalmaticus and C....
Intro: 1831. Native to Crete. The outside is feathered red-purple, changing to white and red-purple at the top. The underside of the petals is yellow, the inside is white with a yellow throat.
Grote zuiver witte bolvormige bloemen met een oranje keel. Eén der mooiste witte krokussen die direct na de winter tezamen met C. sieberi 'Firefly' hun bloemen tonen.
The variation in the Cretan crocus is great, with the most beautiful shades of colour found in the crocus. 'Chiara' shows brilliant purple blushes on the outside of the petals.
There is only a handful available of this unique crocus. Soft yellow are the outer petals and very light lilac are the inner petals. When the flowers are open, the beautiful veining inside is visible. The throat is ochre yellow and surrounded by a...
Intro: 1956 by M. Thoolen. Beautiful and large soft violet-pink flowers, a unique colour. John Grimshaw said about this crocus "vigerous, unique, early, beautiful". Those and some other superlatives were used to convince me to keep offering...
To date, the species has been found in only three locations on limestone rocks in Taşeli Yaylası, southern Turkey. It is an early-flowering crocus, white flowers, darkly feathered on the outside of the petals. Mostly the throat is yellow, as are...
Intro: 1847. Also known as woodland corcus or early crocus. Origin: southern 'Yugoslavia' to the south of Hungary , but mainly on the limestone hills in Dalmatia. These star-shaped, light lavender flowers, often with a light brown-yellow glow on...
Intro: 1847. Origin: southern 'Yugoslavia' to southern Hungary, but mainly on limestone hills in Dalmatia. The star-shaped flowers are particularly richly flowering. Propagates spontaneously and is an excellent crocus for naturalising. Blooms in...
Intro: 1765. Origin: Pyrenees, Alps (Switzerland, northern Italy, Austria, Germany and northern Balkans). A rarely offered species with smaller white flowers.
Intro: 1962. Willem van Eeden called this crocus vain. The outer side of the flowers is ivory with light blue spots on the underside of the petals. The inside is white, greyish white towards the heart. Wonderful orange stamens with soft orange...
A hybrid of Crocus reticulatus x Crocus angustifolius, won by Leonid Bondarenko. Floriferous with large, on the inside golden yellow flowers, the outside is cream coloured with purple stripes. A sterile clone which grows well.
Intro: 1573. Snake's head fritillary. Occurs almost everywhere in Europe. In the Netherlands it can be found along the floodplains of the river IJssel, and in large numbers near Hasselt and the Reeuwijkse Plassen. It is a Stinzen plant. Ideally...
Native to the northern Zagros Mountains in Iran, in marshy meadows along streams at altitudes of 1800 to 4000 metres. The solitary green bell-shaped flowers have chocolate purple stripes. The slender leaves are green in colour. This species is...
Origin: Iran near Isfahan, on wet, loamy meadows at 2500-3000 meters altitude. The plant resembles a floriferous F. michailovskyi, but the flowers are shorter and slimmer and the flower stem is longer. The bell-shaped flowers are dark brown to red...
Origin: Uzbekistan through Afghanistan to northern Iran, and in the Kara-Tau Mountains in Kazakhstan. They can be found around Tashkent and Chimgan. The very beautiful, soft pink flowers are characterised by a wide purple circle around the...
An Ipheion with dark blue flowers selected from Ipheion uniflorum 'Rolf Fiedler. Was registered in 2003 and has proven itself as an excellent flowering pot plant. Good for naturalising.
In recent years, there has been a lot of innovation in the field of dwarf iris. Old varieties are disappearing, especially in the Reticulata group, and new, healthy varieties are being introduced. So is this ice-white iris derived from Iris...
Introduced by Jenny Robinson, from Cyprus. registered in 2004 as a selection of M. neglectum. The very light ice-blue flowers appear from a lime green flower bud, a truly beautiful colour combination. Fragrant.
Selected by M. Philippo. Belongs to the species M. armeniacum, given the appearance and growth habit. Elongated leaves which lay flat on the ground. Soft blue flowers in 8 cm wide clusters, whose tip changes to a silvery white during flowering....
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: 1594. Dutch name: ‘knikkende vogelmelk’ (Drooping star of Bethlehem). Originally occurring in southern Europe and southwestern Asia, but now growing wild in many European countries. Prefers a shady and somewhat afforested area. The flower...
Collected in the late eighties in the woods in Sochi, near the Russian Black Sea, now by far the most popular resort in Russia. The tall, pyramidal growing, dense inflorescence consists of large pure white flowers. This plant is not only perfect...
Native to southwestern Spain and Morocco, where this Star-of-Bethlehem grows in crevices in the limestone rocks. A graceful species with up to 20 pure white, hanging, two centimeter wide bell-shaped flowers. Strong cut flower.
Intro: 1594. Star-of-Bethlehem, locally: 'booger'. Origin: large parts of Europe, North Africa, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon and Israel. The linear, grooved and half-upright green leaves have a distinct white stripe. The umbel is composed of about...
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....
A salmon-coloured pride from the hands of J. de Winter, registered in 1999. Received a Certificate of Approval from the Trial Garden K.A.V.B. in the same year. Salmon orange flowers with a warm orange blush.
Intro: 1802, , descriptions date from the 16th century. Lady Tulip or Candy Tulip. Origin: Northeast Afghanistan and Kashmir (growing wild in some places), southern France and the Greek islands. In Europe they were spread by hitchhiking in the...
Intro: around 1989. Collected in northwestern Iran. This very beautiful little tulip becomes a true eye-catcher in early April. Once the elegant white flowers open, they show a steel blue heart. Award of Merit by the R.H.S. in 1989.
Origin: high in the mountains of Tajikistan, highly variable but always red. The narrow, corrugated, grey-green leaves have red edges and form a rosette. The wonderful scarlet flower with pointed petals is slightly lighter towards the edge and...
T. saxatilis has been known since the early 17th century. At that time it was called 'The Tulip of Candie' (Candie or Candia is the old name for Crete). Reintroduced in 1870 by George Maw. Origin: Crete. Six to twelve green leaves form a rosette....