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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.
A selection from 1997. Perhaps the most beautiful Chionodoxa. Beautiful large flowers with a cornflower blue exterior and a striking ivory heart. The inside of the petals is blue to purple-blue. Blooms long, six to eight weeks. "Blue Giant"...
A soft pink, large-flowered selection from the 1940's. With sunny weeather, the star-shaped flowers with white eyes are wide open, looking upwards. Also in this shade it is a wonderful harbinger of spring which, like C. 'Blue Giant' received an...
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.
Selected by Barr & Sons in 1885. Flower colour: bright white. Good for mixing with for example the blue C. luciliae and then scattering it for naturalising .
Was already recorded in 2008 by R. Huijg, Breezand. A new, distinctive pink selection, great to combine with other spring-flowering bulbs. Naturalises well under deciduous shrubs.
A beautiful large-flowered form with light blue violet flowers to complement the range of glory-of-the-snow. Profusely flowering in March-April. Nice in pots combined with Viola cornuta.
Glory-of-the-snow, as undergrowth of trees and shrubs, but also for in lawns. For sun to partial shade, few soil requirements. 100-120 pieces per m2. Bulb size: 4 cm.
(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.
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.
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...
Blue star lily. Intro: 1821. Origin: from the Caspian Sea via Asia Minor to Israel and Egypt. The slender flower stems with dark funnel-shaped flowers appear from late May. The umbel contains ten to fifteen loose flowers. They thrive in a dry,...