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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.
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,...
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.
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.
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.
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....
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.
Named after the French botanist Jean Baptiste Bory de Cent-Vincent. The species is found, among others, in ancient olive groves, rocky grasslands and sand dunes to the south and west of Greece, the Ionian Islands and southeast Crete. The available...
An offspring selected from a seed lot CEH 613 and named after one of Antoine Hoog's sons. Very soft lilac flowers. The veins that lighten from the dark centre are clearly visible. Also very attractive are the three bright red stigmas.
The slightly fragrant flowers of this species, which occurs in Azerbaijan and Iran along the Caspian Sea coast, are usually white with a yellow throat. Sometimes the flowers are soft lilac or show a hint of lilac. Two flowers usually appear one...
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.
Intro: 1974. C. hakkariensis is found on mountain steppes in Hakkâri province, southeastern Turkey and is also named after the site. The most common colours are shades of lilac white forms are also found. A characteristic feature of the species is...
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...
Later research showed that C. mathewii has a much wider range than initially thought. The number of forms and colours is also large. A number of cultivars have been named, including this 'pink princess', soft lilac-pink flowers and the well-known...
Characteristic of this autumn crocus from the southern and western Peloponnese are the variable-sized black stamens (melantherus means black stamens). Nevertheless, there may be plants in which the stamens are not black. The outer petals of 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...
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...
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...