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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.
By far the most widely cultivated hybrid of E. tuolumnense, probably crossed with E. californicum in the past as well, courtesy of mr. Lou Eater. The 30cm high flower stem is flanked by four to five nodding sulfur-yellow flowers with a striking,...
Intro: ca. 1895. A cultivar with large white flowers with a narrow brown-yellow ring on the throat. The leaves are beautiful marbled and predominantly light yellow veined. This cream white beauty will grow well in humus-rich soil. Wonderful in a...
Intro: 1904. Native to mainly the forested coastal areas of northwestern California. The cream-coloured flowers, usually two to three per flower stem, have beautiful orange-yellow markings at the base and stand well above the magnificent marbled...
Crosses result from E. californicum x E. 'Pink Beauty'. Both pink and white flower colours occur in these, the flower markings are also variable, yellow to orange-yellow circles, or sometimes even brownish-red spots around the throat. The leaves...
The earliest flowering Erythronium, not the easiest. Can be kept in the garden with some patience. The large white flowers with showy yellow stamens sometimes have a pink tinge. Marbled leaves. Native to the west and center of the Caucasus and the...
Cultivated since 1596. Common names are dogs-tooth or dog's tooth violet, but is also called serpent's tongue, trout lily, deer tongue. The available mix consists of the colours white, pink to deep purple with various shades in between. Gorgeous...
Cultivated since 1596. Common names are dogs-tooth or dog's tooth violet, but is also called serpent's tongue, trout lily, deer tongue. Gorgeous marbled leaves. If planted (as undergrowth) in a nutrient-rich, not too dry soil, they can replicate...
Cultivated since 1596. Common names are dogs-tooth or dog's tooth violet, but is also called serpent's tongue, trout lily, deer tongue. Gorgeous marbled leaves. If planted (as undergrowth) in a nutrient-rich, not too dry soil, they can replicate...
Origin: Altai Mountains in western Siberia. The available batch originates from offspring from the Republic of Tuva, upstream along the river Ka-hem at an altitude of 2300-2500 meters. There is a soft lilac haze over the large pure white flowers,...
A stunning hybrid, cultivated by Willem van Eeden and named after one of John Amand's daughters. John is a friendly relation from England where he offers a fantastic range of flower bulbs. Presumably E. 'Joanna' originated from E. tuolumnense x E....
In the late 1980s, J. Huisman proudly showed this cross, created from E. johnsonii x E. 'White Beauty', to Peter C. Nijssen, both quickly agreeing that they were dealing with something special. Around 2010, Huisman showed 'Rosy Wing' several times...
Beautiful new selections created by years of crossing descendants of E. revolutum x E. 'White Beauty', from the hands of Mr. Huisman. The leaves are irregularly marbled, sometimes almost solid green.
A genus closely related to Brodiaea and Dichelostemma. consisting of more than thirty species. Triteleia tolerates full sun but also light shade. The soil type may vary from sand to loam, but should be well-drained and rich in nutrients. Perfect...
Brodiaea, A umbel, with about 40 violet-blue flowers, with a violet central vein. The whole is reminiscent of a finer edition of an Agapanthus. The leaves are slightly bluish dark green, 1.5 cm wide and recumbent. Excellent cut flower.
Intro: 1835. Origin: British Columbia, Idaho and California (USA). The flower heads are filled with dozens of milky white, funnel-shaped, upright flowers. The strong yet supple flower stems are about 50 cm high. Blooms in June-July.
It is a richly flowering form, up to twenty-five flowers per flower head, with decorative creamy white flowers that feature a distinctive, purple-violet stripe from the centre flowing out over the petals. Excellent cut flower.