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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,...
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...
The first descriptions of this in South Eastern Europe, Cyprus, the Caucasus and western Turkey occurring species date from before 1700. By crossing and lots of selection work the now available cultivars arose. Anemone blanda naturalises well, but...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
In Greek meadows, large-flowered, colourful anemones are still plentiful. They are excellent cut flowers and also combine well with other bulbous plants, as has been the case in recent years in mixed plantings.
Anemones flower longer if the spent...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
In Greek meadows, the large-flowered, coloured anemones are still being found. They are excellent cut flowers and can be beautifully combined with other bulbous plants, as is often done at the Keukenhof in recent years. The anemones bloom longer...
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.
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.
This anemone was collected by Frank Waley at the time of the First World War in France. Later he spread it from his garden in Sevenoaks, Kent. Soft blue, large flowers with prominent stamens.
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.
Royal blue flowers, the deepest blue of all cultivars, contrasting beautifully with the dark, deeply cut foliage. Earned an Award of Merit in 1915. The entire plant structure is refined and graceful.
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...
Intro 1850, probably A. pavonia x A. hortensis, occurring in southern France. Large scarlet flowers. The yellowish-white centre encloses the black stamens, creating a striking contrast. The leaves are less incised than those of A. coronoria, to...
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....
In the southwestern Caucasus, C. colchicum is found in several small patches in humus-rich limestone, mostly along forested riverbeds. The sweet-smelling, pink flowers appear in late summer and continue flowering well into autumn.
Winter-flowering cyclamen with a delicate pattern on the soft pink petals. The offer concerns seedlings with the appearance of C. coum 'Porcelain Flower'.
Winter-flowering cyclamen. Silvery foliage with unusual markings in the shape of a Christmas tree.
The leaves are round to kidney-shaped with an almost flawless edge. The flower colour is variable pink. Hardy to as much as -30 °C.
Winter-flowering cyclamen. Silvery foliage with unusual markings in the shape of a Christmas tree.
The foliage is round to kidney-shaped with an almost flawless edge. The flower colour is white. Hardy to as much as -30 °C.
Origin: Eastern Bulgaria, northern and southern Turkey, western Syria, Lebanon, northern Israel and the Crimean peninsula. The leaves are round to kidney-shaped and have an almost smooth edge. The flower and leaf colour is very variable, we offer...
A rarely available Cyclamen from the forests of northern Iran, also occuring south of the Caspian Sea in the Eastern Caucasus. Classified as a subspecies of C. coum, but both the leaves and the flowers are larger. The heart-shaped marbled leaves...
Intro: ca. 1930. Origin: South Greece , Crete, western and southern Turkey , North Cyprus . The original sites the tubers are found at great depth , which is caused by the fleshy ' adventitious roots . The flower color is soft pink to ceriseroze ,...
Brian Matthew, the Cyclamen Society president found a form with pure silver leaves in Glyfada, southeast of Athens. Prefers a warm and dry place in the summer.
This white-flowered form was discovered only after 1980. Recently, white flowering plants were found on Western Crete as well. Comes true from seed. In summer, it likes a nice warm and dry spot.
An almost extinct species that occurs sporadically in the mountains of Lebanon. It is one of the most beautiful cyclamen with large, light pink, fragrant flowers that appear in spring, from February to April. The petals have a clearly visible red...
Intro: probably 1739. Origin: Rhodes, Cyprus, Crete(?), a single location in southern Greece (near Athos), south-west Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, northeast Algeria and northern Tunisia. From these from December to March flowering species,...
Origin: calcareous mountain forests of Central and Southern Europe, from France to Poland, Slovakia and Bulgaria to Croatia. The highly fragrant flowers are pink to carmine red, often with a dark glow. The dark green leaves are subtly white...
Origin: northern Mediterranean countries, locally in southern France, the islands of Corsica, Sardinia, Kos and Rhodes and in Algeria. A beautiful Cyclamen that has a gentle fragrance and produces many flowers.
A number of subspecies are known in...
This fairly rare, lily-of-the-valley scented Cyclamen is the only species found in Libya, and even then only in a limited area in Cyrenaica. Unique to the species is that the anthers protrude 1.5-2.5 mm above the flower tube. Pink flowers and...
Introduced by N.C. Ruiter in 1956, therefore calles a Ruiter hybrid. The flowers are orange with a striking deep vein on the outside, the stamens are orange. In the bud stage this eremurus is dark orange.
Found en masse in Uzbekistan and elsewhere at altitudes of 2000 metres. The flower stalks easily reach a metre and the flower spikes are studded with innumerable soft yellow flowers. The anthers turn brown in a later flowering stage, giving the...
(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.
(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...
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...
Intro: 1884. Origin: northeast Turkey and the adjacent area of the former Soviet Union. Dutch name: broad-leaved birdseed. Flowers in February-March with short-stemmed, slightly conical flower clusters flanked by two to three bright green leaves...
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...
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...
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.