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
Price
Price
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.
A Russian species found a.o. along the Black Sea, along forest edges on somewhat moist soil. The maroon-coloured, almost black sheath with a creamy-white spadix appears in April-May and spreads a manure scent mainly in the morning. Dark green,...
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...
An Italian Arum that stands out for its brilliant white marbled leaves. The evergreen leaves combine well with early-flowering bulbous plants such as Cyclamen and Galanthus. This can mostly be admired in the woods on English estates where they are...
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.
The only autumn-flowering species. Native to Corsica, Sardinia and Spain. The spathe is purple on the inside, has a lighter colour on the outside and reaches a height of 40 cm. The spadix is almost black. During flowering, the plant emits an...
Introduced in 1987 by Arum specialist Peter Boyce who found the Arum in south-west Crete. The quite large shiny purple flower sheath is surrounded by dark green glossy leaves. Sometimes the leaves appear before winter. An attractive species for a...
Native to central and eastern Turkey at altitudes of 1300 to 2060 metres. Remarkably, the flower sheath, green-cream with a purple edge, protrudes far above the shiny green leaves, a much appreciated feature. Hardy.
Intro: 1892. Origin: Turkey, where the original sites, despite the late 'discovery', have been al but cleared. The leaves are deeply incised and a slightly bronze green when they emerge. They bloom slightly later than E. hyemalis, but the golden...
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...
Already discovered in 1950 by Jens Ole Pederson, Denmark. Was then sent to the Botanical Garden of Gothenburg. Registered only in 1989 by Richard Blakeway-Philips. Winter aconite surprises us when its buds open to show their egg yolk yellow...
A highly distinctive Eranthis. This soft sulfur yellow aconite emerges from apricot-coloured flower buds. In 1985 discovered in the garden of Frau Ruth Treff Darmstadt, but introduced in 1997. Easy growing and fantastic company for the snowdrops.
E. tubergenii originated from a cross of E. hyemalis x E. cilicica. The crossing work was done by Mr J.M.C. Hoog. 'Sachsengold' is a new selection introduced by J. Raschke, which originated from another selection 'Guinea Gold'. Large, deep golden...
Found in a cemetery in Cologne in the 1970s. A nivalis with intense yellow markings and a green ovary. After two years in a permanent location, the features come out best.
A small snowdrop, from G. woronowii, with light green, shiny leaves. The pretty little flower has a soft green mark on the inner petals, a green tip on the outer petals.
(Double Group). A beautiful snowdrop with six outer petals and six inner petals, beautifully symmetrically arranged. Godfrey Owen was found in Mrs Margaret Owen's garden around 1996, and named by her after her late husband.
(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.
A green G. elwesii, flowering as early as December. Initially, the flower is not very large, but if the snowdrop is established for a few years, the flower comes to full development.
this selection from Trym comes from the hands of the highly acclaimed Colin Mason. Even more beautiful because of the special green markings on the outside of the petals. Rare.
(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...
(Double Group). Truly a maverick. The partly green, outer petals are very slender and point, somewhat wavy, far outwards, resembling the whiskers of a walrus. The inner petals show a heart-shaped, green patch on the outside. Small plant,...
(Imperial Group). In 1995, Veronica Cross encountered this striking snowdrop in the former Backhouse Garden at Sutton Court in Herefordshire. The appearance of the flower is reminiscent of an insect. Very slender flower shape, the tubular, inner...
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...
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.