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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.

Nieuwe Oogst, flower bulbs

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  • Categories: Native bulbs
  • Categories: Corydalis
Allium carinatum subsp. pulchellum
. Available to order from July 2025
Allium carinatum subsp. pulchellum
Intro: 1810. Origin: South East Europe and West Asia. The original form A. cirrhosum (one of the synonyms) has an inflorescence that does not just carry flowers but also bulbils. The flower bud remains ‘hidden’ for a long time at the end of the...
Out-of-Stock
€5.50

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Allium ursinum subsp. ursinum
Intro: 1753. Also known as wild garlic. This rampant allium occurs on large parts of the Northern Hemisphere. In the Netherlands it grows wild in some places, but it is a protected species (‘Stinzen plant’). The oval leaves are reminiscent of...
Out-of-Stock
€4.00

Available to order from July 2025

Anemone apennina 'Petrovac'
. Available to order from July 2025
Anemone apennina 'Petrovac'
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,...
There are not enough products in stock
€4.50

Available to order from July 2025

Anemone apennina var. alba
. Available to order from July 2025
Anemone apennina var. alba
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...
There are not enough products in stock
€3.50

Available to order from July 2025

Anemone nemorosa
. Available to order from July 2025
Anemone nemorosa
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...
Out-of-Stock
€5.50

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Anemone nemorosa 'Robinsoniana'
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.
Out-of-Stock
€6.50

Available to order from July 2025

Anemone ranunculoides subsp. ranunculoides
. Available to order from July 2025
Anemone ranunculoides subsp. 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...
Out-of-Stock
€4.95

Available to order from July 2025

Anemone x lipsiensis
. Available to order from July 2025
Anemone x lipsiensis
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....
Out-of-Stock
€6.00

Available to order from July 2025

Arum italicum
. Available to order from July 2025
Arum italicum
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...
Out-of-Stock
€3.75

Available to order from July 2025

Arum maculatum
. Available to order from July 2025
Arum maculatum
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.
Out-of-Stock
€4.95

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Camassia leichtlinii 'Caerulea'
Stately blue flower sprays set with large star-shaped dark blue flowers on sturdy straight stems. Camassia can be perfectly combined with perennials in the herbaceous border. The decorative dark green linear leaves envelop the stem and point up...
Out-of-Stock
€3.75

Available to order from July 2025

Chionodoxa luciliae
. Available to order from July 2025
Chionodoxa luciliae
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.
Out-of-Stock
€3.00

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Chionodoxa sardensis
(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.
Out-of-Stock
€4.50

Available to order from July 2025

Chionodoxa siehei
. Available to order from July 2025
Chionodoxa siehei
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.
Out-of-Stock
€3.50

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis bulbosa
The common name "Hollowroot" refers to the subterranean part, which is mostly hollow. Origin: Eurasia. The twenty pink or white spurred flowers form a cluster and bloom in early spring. The plant prefers a slightly woodsy soil. It used to be a...
Out-of-Stock
€6.00

Available to order from July 2025

Corydalis buschii
. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis buschii
The now available rootstocks were once found near Vladivostok (Siberia). This species has purplish red flowers. A great feature of the species is that if the rootstocks would be planted too deep or too shallow, a new root system is created at the...
There are not enough products in stock
€4.50

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis glaucescens 'Early Beauty'
On his very first trip to the mountains, Janis Ruksans found a corydalis in the Medeo Mountains in Kazakhstan. Before the corydalis was given its proper name, it went through life as: 'The pretty corydalis from the Kyrgyz Alatau'. Later, Arnis...
There are not enough products in stock
€9.00

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis haussknechtii
First described in the notes of the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh in 1988. Its range is restricted to south-eastern Turkey and northern Iraq, growing in temperate climates. The slender stem bears an airy-looking flower cluster, consisting of...
There are not enough products in stock
€9.00

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis kusnetzovii
An early-flowering species from the forests of the northern Caucasus, Teberda, Stavropol. A variable species, the flowers of the offered form are creamy white with an apricot-pink hue and stand in compact clusters. (B)
There are not enough products in stock
€9.00

Available to order from July 2025

Corydalis ledebouriana
. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis ledebouriana
A very early flowering species, usually occurring on somewhat nutrient-rich soils in the mountains of Central Asia. The offered lot was found on Mount Chimgan in Uzbekistan, where it occurs en masse among the Gagea. The compact flower cluster...
There are not enough products in stock
€15.00

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis marschalliana
A closely related species to C. bulbosa (cava), cave root, from the Balkans, Crimea, Caucasus and north-western Iran, among others. It is characterised by completely ovate to elliptical leaf lobes, but because of its wide distribution, other leaf...
Out-of-Stock
€4.95

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis nudicaulis 'Talogan'
Originating from a population in Afghanistan, Tajikistan, distinct from the species because of a late flowering, coarser and broader leaves, dark green and even glistening. The flower colour is unusual, white with contrasting brown. C. nudicaulis...
There are not enough products in stock
€12.00

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis schanginii subsp. ainae ‘Apricotin'
From numerous seedlings of C. schanginii subsp schanginii x C. schanginii subsp. ainae, this new hybrid was selected at the Dambrascus nursery. The flowers stand out with an intense pink- apricot hue, the grey-green foliage is more broadly lobed...
There are not enough products in stock
€13.50

Available to order from July 2025

Corydalis schanginii subsp. schanginii
. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis schanginii subsp. schanginii
This corydalis probably has the largest distribution area of all Central Asian species. Available are descendants of plants that were collected at 1800-2000 m altitude in Kyrgyzstan near Bishek in 1975. When this miracle was found in 1833, they...
There are not enough products in stock
€9.50

Available to order from July 2025

Corydalis solida 'Cantate'
. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis solida 'Cantate'
Spring Corydalis or bird-in-a-bush. Origin: Lebanon, western Asia and large parts of Europe. In the Netherlands along the major rivers, around old country estates and still here and there in southern Limburg. A special feature of this bulbous...
Out-of-Stock
€3.95

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis solida subsp. solida
Also called Spring Corydalis or bird-in-a-bush. Origin: Lebanon, West Asia and parts of Europe. In the Netherlands along the great rivers around old country estates and even some areas in South Limburg. A particular feature of this plant is the...
Out-of-Stock
€4.95

Available to order from July 2025

Corydalis solida subsp. solida 'Beth Evans'
. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis solida subsp. solida 'Beth Evans'
Bright pink flowers with a white spot on the spurs which becomes more noticeable as the flowering time passes. The leaves are coarser than those of the other varieties. Reliable. (B)
Out-of-Stock
€3.50

Available to order from July 2025

Corydalis solida subsp. solida ‘Merlin’
. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis solida subsp. solida 'Merlin'
Truly a beauty: the purest white flowers, with a subtle dark purple line on the petal tabs. Compact flower clusters.
Out-of-Stock
€4.50

Available to order from July 2025

Corydalis solida 'Purple Bird'
. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis solida subsp. solida 'Purple Bird'
After years of selecting beautiful seedlings of C. solida, Mr. Huisman developed a series of Bird-in-a-bush with bird names. This find is deep purple. Another selection appears to have been registered recently under this name, therefore it is...
Out-of-Stock
€3.50

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis solida subsp. solida 'White Knight'
Blooms very late, one of the latest. The racemes of large white flowers are longer than in the other varieties.
Out-of-Stock
€6.00

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Corydalis vittae 'Goliath'
In the western Caucasus growing Corydalis vittae, A. Seisums encountered this large form. The initially creamy white flowers glow to snow-white. A beautiful, robust, late-flowering Corydalis, certainly among the best white forms. (S)
There are not enough products in stock
€9.00

Available to order from July 2025

Crocus tommasinianus
. Available to order from July 2025
Crocus tommasinianus
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...
Out-of-Stock
€4.00

Available to order from July 2025

Crocus vernus subsp. albiflorus
. Available to order from July 2025
Crocus vernus subsp. albiflorus
Intro: 1765. Origin: Pyrenees, Alps (Switzerland, northern Italy, Austria, Germany and northern Balkans). A rarely offered species with smaller white flowers.
There are not enough products in stock
€7.50

Available to order from July 2025

Crocus vernus subsp. vernus
. Available to order from July 2025
Crocus vernus subsp. vernus
Intro: 1765. Origin: Pyrenees, Alps (Switzerland, northern Italy, Austria, Germany and northern Balkans). A rarely offered species. Colour is variable, from pale to dark purple mostly with a dark spot at the tips of the petals.
Out-of-Stock
€4.95

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Eranthis hyemalis
Intro: 1570. Grows wild in large parts of Europe and North America. Originally: Southern France, Italy, the former Yugoslavia and Bulgaria but also in northern Iraq and Afghanistan. The leaves are not as deeply incised as those of E. cilicica, the...
Out-of-Stock
€6.50

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Erythronium 'Pagoda'
By far the most widely cultivated hybrid of E. tuolumnense, probably crossed with E. californicum in the past as well, courtesy of mr. Lou Eater. The 30cm high flower stem is flanked by four to five nodding sulfur-yellow flowers with a striking,...
Out-of-Stock
€4.95

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Erythronium dens-canis
Cultivated since 1596. Common names are dogs-tooth or dog's tooth violet, but is also called serpent's tongue, trout lily, deer tongue. The available mix consists of the colours white, pink to deep purple with various shades in between. Gorgeous...
Out-of-Stock
€4.95

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Fritillaria meleagris
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...
Out-of-Stock
€5.50

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Galanthus 'Viridapice'
The outer leaves have green tips as if they have been dipped in a pot of green paint. J.C.M. de Hoog found this snowdrop around 1900 near an old farmhouse in province North-Holland. The English sometimes think that this snowdrop is of English...
Out-of-Stock
€5.50

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Galanthus elwesii var. elwesii
In 1874, the English plant collector Henry John Elwes discovered the great snowdrop. It was named after him, Galanthus elwesii. There are two varieties, Galanthus elwesii var. elwesii and Galanthus elwesii var. monostictus. The two are not much...
Out-of-Stock
€3.95

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Galanthus nivalis
The common snowdrop that everyone knows. This species is native to Western, Central and Southern Europe, but was imported into the Netherlands around 1500. The outer petals are white and the inner ones have small, green, U-shaped marks on them....
Out-of-Stock
€3.95

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Galanthus woronowii
This species was found in 1935 by a Russian botanist and named after Woronow, a plant collector from Georgia. This snowdrop is so clearly different that it is easy recognisable. The leaves are much wider than those of other snowdrops and glossy...
Out-of-Stock
€3.50

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Hyacinthoides hispanica -blauw-
Spanish bluebells, fantastic in combination with the ostrich fern: Matteuccia struthiopteris. The first description of the wood hyacinth dates from 1601. The broad leaves are somewhat pendulous and ribbon-shaped. The round to 40 cm high flower...
Out-of-Stock
€3.00

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Hyacinthoides non-scripta
Bluebell. This species has been known since the Middle Ages. Although the original sites can be found in northwestern Italy and southeastern France, we find the harebells wild in most of Europe. The glossy green leaves are quite wide and...
Out-of-Stock
€3.50

Available to order from July 2025

Leucojum aestivum
. Available to order from July 2025
Leucojum aestivum
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....
Out-of-Stock
€4.50

Available to order from July 2025

Leucojum vernum
. Available to order from July 2025
Leucojum vernum
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...
Out-of-Stock
€7.95

Available to order from July 2025

Muscari botryoides 'Superstar'
. Available to order from July 2025
Muscari botryoides 'Superstar'
Muscari botryoides is the only true blue grape hyacinth that still sporadically occurs in the wild in the Netherlands (stinzen plant). Unfortunately, our batch has become too small to sell from. Alternatively we offer the selection 'Superstar', a...
Out-of-Stock
€5.25

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Muscari comosum
Intro: 1596. Origin: South Africa, France, Central Europe, southern Russia and Southwest Asia. Tassel Hyacinth. Occurs scattered throughout the Dutch dunes. The lower part of the flower is composed of fertile olive-green flowers on short stems and...
Out-of-Stock
€3.00

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Muscari latifolium
Intro: 1858. Origin: Western and Southern Turkey. The well-developed flowers at the top of the inflorescence are light blue, the lower part of the inflorescence is composed of dark sterile flowers. Typically, the plant has only one broad leaf...
Out-of-Stock
€3.00

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Muscari neglectum
Intro: 1568. Origin: Belgium (Meuse valley), France, North Africa and southwestern Asia. The three to six narrow light green leaves can reach a length of up to 30 cm. The flower colour is almost black (very dark), with a narrow bright white edge...
Out-of-Stock
€3.00

Available to order from July 2025

Narcissus poeticus var. recurvus
. Available to order from July 2025
Narcissus poeticus var. recurvus
Intro: before 1600. Division 13. Also known as old pheasant's eye. It is when almost all daffodils have stopped flowering, that the fragrant flowers of this beauty open. The bright white, lightly backward curved petals surround a green cup with a...
Out-of-Stock
€4.50

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Narcissus pseudonarcissus subsp. lobularis
Division 13, Section pseudo narcissus. A geographic form of N. pseudo-narcissus, originally occurring in southern Belgium and northern France. It is one of the earliest flowering daffodils (March), the sepals are cream yellow and the cup is...
Out-of-Stock
€4.00

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Narcissus pseudonarcissus subsp. obvallaris
Division 13, section pseudo narcissus. In the UK these wild growing, deep golden daffodil is called the Tenby-Daffodil, the national daffodil of Wales. There are several stories circulating about how the daffodil ended up in Wales. The following...
Out-of-Stock
€3.75

Available to order from July 2025

Ornithogalum nutans
. Available to order from July 2025
Ornithogalum nutans
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...
Out-of-Stock
€4.00

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Ornithogalum umbellatum
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...
Out-of-Stock
€4.50

Available to order from July 2025

Saxifraga granulata 'Plena'
Haarlems Klokkenspel, it still occurs sporadically in the Netherlands. Its most striking feature is its full flower, all stamens have turned into crown (flower) petals. As a consequence, the plant cannot produce seed and disappears in the wild,...
€4.95
Uitverkocht
. Available to order from July 2025
Saxifraga granulata 'Plena'
Dutch name: 'Haarlems Klokkenspel', described in 1932 by Dr Jacob Botke at the Schierstins in Friesland, where they were called 'stinseblomkes' by locals. From late April, the white, with slightly green in the centre, double flowers appear on...
Out-of-Stock
€5.00

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Scilla bifolia
Intro: 1568, in the Netherlands since 1594. Origin: Central and Southern Europe and Asia Minor. An early flowering (March) and fragrant species. The sheathing leaves are often two in number (bifolia) and placed on one side of the flower stalk....
Out-of-Stock
€4.50

Available to order from July 2025

Scilla mischtschenkoana 'Tubergeniana'
. Available to order from July 2025
Scilla mischtschenkoana 'Tubergeniana'
Intro: 1931. Origin: northwest of Iran (Tabriz) and the Caucasus. The few leaves are narrow and line to duct-shaped. The flower clusters, which seem to grow directly from the ground, consist of star-shaped, somewhat nodding, very light blue...
Out-of-Stock
€3.50

Available to order from July 2025

Scilla siberica
. Available to order from July 2025
Scilla siberica
Intro: 1796. Origin: Southeast Europe, the Caucasus, Anatolia and southeast Asia. The bright blue, nodding, star- to bell-shaped flowers are marked on each petal by a dark blue central vein. The best-known Scilla, very suitable for naturalising.
Out-of-Stock
€4.50

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Scilla siberica 'Alba'
A white-flowering squill with the same properties as S. siberica. Native to the forests and meadows in the Caucasus, Crimea and northern Iran.
Out-of-Stock
€4.75

Available to order from July 2025

. Available to order from July 2025
Tulipa sylvestris
Perhaps the oldest described species, Rembertus Dodonaeus described the forest tulip in 1568. The oldest depiction in Europe of T. sylvestris is from 1549. Origin: Iran, North Africa and Europe, also in the Netherlands, but probably feral, native...
Out-of-Stock
€3.50

Available to order from July 2025


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