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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.
C. banaticus grows in damp, cool places in Romania, northeast of the former Yugoslavia and in southwestern Ukraine. A unique deep lilac-blue autumn crocus of which the outer petals are much longer than the inner. For a cool place.
Intro: 1843. Origin: Greece and the island of Crete. Initially C. cartwrightianus was considered to be C. sativus they are closely related to each other. Flower and leaves appear simultaneously. The pure white flowers are accentuated by three...
In southern Greece (Peloponnese), this species is locally very common in ancient olive groves and below fig trees. Dr. C. N. Goulimy found this crocus in November 1954 but it was only in 1975 that this weatherproof, autumn-flowering species was...
A brilliant pure white form from southern Greece, the Mani peninsula, discovered by M. Hoog. The sharply pointed petals give the flower a distinctive shape. Good growing and reliably flowering.
Origin: Greece (Cyclades). An almost winter-flowering crocus with the common name 'Christmas crocus'. The inside of the flower is soft lilac, fading to white and eventually yellow towards the throat. The exterior of the nearly round petals has a...
Perhaps the most desirable in the crocus range. Collected by Helmut Kerndorff and Erich Pasche in 1992 in the Taurus mountains in Antalya province, southern Turkey. Named after Brian Mathew. The offered is carefully raised from seed, the...
The introduction of C. ochroleucus dates back to October 1859. They are still found in Lebanon, southwestern Syria and northern Israel, mostly in rocky areas. The flower colour is creamy white with a broad yellow base, the name is derived from...
A highly variable form originally collected among the ruins of ancient Ariasos north of Antalya. The range comes from a form selected by Václav Jošt: the flowers are fragrant, mostly five per tuber, lilac-pink. C. pallassi is named after the...
Pulchellus means wonderful or beautiful, hence the (Dutch) commonly used name: pracht-crocus (pomp crocus). An eye-catcher introduced by Mr Tom Hoog. Elegant large white flowers with an unusual pearl grey glow. The throat is yellow with a hint of...
An autumn-flowering crocus that is quite isolated in Crimea, found in small groups in bright places under trees, mostly along forest edges and in grass. Named after the Latvian botanist Nikolai J. Puring. The somewhat variable lilac-blue flowers...
The saffron crocus. It is generally believed that C. sativus is a form of C. cashmirianus. The flower colour is lilac-purple with beautiful veins. The relatively large orange-red stigmas usually protrude above the flower and seems like they only...
Intro: 1977. Origin: Portugal, north of Lisbon, in northwest Spain in the La Guardia area and southwest in the province of Cadiz. The flowers of this fragrant crocus are dark purple with dark stripes. The centre is white to very pale yellow.
An easy-growing autumn crocus, native to the Crimea, Caucasus, Turkey and Iran. However, several forms of C. speciosus occur in this large area, which Janis Ruksans divides into several species, subspecies, types. He devotes several pages to this...
A form of C. speciosus cultivated in the Netherlands in 1913 by Van Tubergen. White flowers with an orange throat, easily growing. Incidentally, no pure white form is found in wild populations.
(Imperial Group). An Elwesii-hybrid whose outer petals are quite strongly curved and in warm weather they elegantly flip backwards. Striking is the beautiful markings on the inner petals, at the top there is a dark green oval spot connected by a...
(Twomark group). Jan Huisman selected this snowdrop from a batch of bulbs he bought from an old childhood friend of his father. That man was ahead of his time. He had many different snowdrops which he sold at the time as two varieties, single and...
(Imperial Group). In a batch of snowdrops that bulb grower Jan Huisman bought from farmers in the Wieringermeer, he discovered a snowdrop that was clearly different. Not with regard to the markings, which were not different from the Galanthus...
(Double Group). TThe well-known double snowdrop that may have been in cultivation before 1727. Karl-Heinz Neuwirth found a first mention in: Hermann Boerhaave, Index alter Plantarum quae in Horto Academico Lugduno-Batavo aluntur ... Pars Secunda,...
(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.
Another Greatorex double. A renowned series of double snowdrops from Heyrick Greatorex which are quite similar. The good man could not choose and therefore gave some that are very similar a nice name. These snowdrops have neat skirts as well, but...
(Imperial Group). A giant snodrop, there is some doubt on the existence of this cultivar in literature. It is said that this old breed was registered by Van Tubergen in 1914. Yet truly distinctive because of height, vigour and size of the flowers....
(Imperial Group). A cultivar cultivated by Kath Drydon, a sturdy, uniform selection from Galanthus elwesii. In fine weather, the outer petals are completely horizontal like propellers. The flower stalk has a nod close to the dark green gynoecium....
(Twomark Group). One of three selections from G. elwesii by Patrick van den Berg. Remarkable is the flower position of this late-flowering snowdrop, for quite a long time the flowers stand horizontally where it is clearly visible, that the short...
(Imperial Group). If you could only choose one cultivar you should take this one. This is a superb snowdrop. The flower stalks are more than 30 cm long and the large flowers have beautiful convex outer petals. The inner petals have V-U-shaped...
(Twomark Group). Very subtle are the small green markings on the outer flower petals of this early-flowering snowdrop. Once the inner petals are also visible, two green markings stand out. A selection from G. elwesii that smells deliciously of honey.
(Imperial Group). Snowwhite is a selection of Galanthus elwesii. Its markings are the same, but this snowdrop is very floriferous and blooms later than the species. This Dutch selection should not be confused with 'Snow White', an English...
(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...
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...
(Imperial Group). Very distinctive for its snow-white colour. Recognisable from a great distance, G. 'White Dream' is one of the whitest snowdrops. Late flowering, March and vigorously growing. A Dutch snowdrop introduced by Tom Koopman.
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...
(Synonyms: G. elwesii subsp. minor and G. elwesii subsp. yatintaschii). Closely related to G. elwesii but smaller in all parts. Was already described by Czech botanist L.J. Celakovsky in 1891. A good-growing species that occurs from southern...
Described in 1947 by botanist L.M. Kemularia-Nathadze. Named after Lagodehki a nature reserve in eastern Georgia, in the south of Central Caucasus. Slender green leaves, an olive-green gynoecium and green markings on the inner petals.
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....
Intro: 1808. G. plicatus was named by German botanist F.A. Marchall von Bieberstein in 1819. Originally occurring in the Crimea. The name plicatus (pleated, folded) refers to the shape of the leaf, which is an important characteristic for this...
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...
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...
A selection of recent origin, 2003. The first pink-flowering ipheion, from Washfield Nurseries, found in seedlings of I. uniflorum 'Wisley Blue'. Soft pink, fragrant flowers with a dark vein on each petal. Good growing.
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.
Large amounts of bright blue flowers, with clearly contrasting stamens and a sweet, mild fragrance. Interestingly, the shape of the flower can vary. A good selection that naturalises well.
I. uniflorum was introduced in 1832. Origin: Southern Brazil, Uruguay, Argentina and Peru, where they occur in large numbers in meadows and grasslands as well as on rocky terrains. They thrive in full sun. Crushed leaves have a mild onion flavor,...
Intro: 1981. Collected by Dr Rolf Fiedler as Beauverdia sellowiana in Patagonia, Argentina. In its native habitat, Nothoscordum grows in full sun on powdery sandy soil. Was presented at the Royal Hortical Society in London in 1984 as: Ipheion...
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.