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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.
Autumn bell flower. ‘Fairy bell flower’ in German. From August, graceful pearl white bell-shaped flowers appear, often in pairs, on a stem that turns red in the fall. This red colour extends to the ovary at the top of the flower. Various wild...
Intro: 1825. Known as Chinese chives and garlic chives. In China, Japan and from Southeast Asia to India, the leaves of this onion have been used through the centuries as an ingredient in salads. The leaves are narrow and flat on one side. The...
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...
Intro: 1988. One of many descendants arising from selection work by Mr Visser, St Pancras. The medium-sized flowers have an unusual colour. The outside of the petals is amethyst violet with cream white flower heads, the inside is ivory with an...
A scarce hybrid of C. autumnale and C. variegatum. The intensely chequered, violet-pink flower pattern is clearly derived from the parent C. variegatum. However, this descendant with slender blue-green leaves is much more trouble-free in its...
The white-flowering form of C. autumnale, which was awarded an AGM in 2018 and a Jubilee Certificate from the K.A.V.B. in 2010. The flowers are slightly smaller than those of the pink form, they are nicely scattered, a charming bulbous plant for...
This probable hybrid of C. cilicicum was first seen in Asia Minor in 1597. The broad, strongly ribbed leaves never appears earlier than in spring. From the strikingly large tubers grow twenty purple flowers. One of the best indoor flowering dry...
Synonymous with Colchicum byzantinum 'Album'.
A floriferous, white, sterile form of C. byzantinum, which has become a rarity. Registered by C.P.J. Breed in 2000. Initially, the flowers are soft purple, but in full bloom the flowers become snow...
An imperial purple form of the in Turkey, Syria and Lebanon common species C. cilicicum. The fragrant flowers are decorated with fine grey-white veins on the outside of the petals. Has few soil requirements and tolerates full sun. AGM in 2018...
C. cupanii is named after the Italian botanist Francesco Cupani (1657-1710). Widely distributed in Greece, Sicily, Sardinia, southern France and Algeria. The offered form is particularly common in Tunisia and is distinguished from the species by...
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.
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...
Intro: 1867. Origin: North Africa, mainly in Tunisia and Algeria. The round, sometimes heart-shaped and fleshy leaves are dark green with inconspicuous markings and appear at the same time as the flowers. The fragrant flowers are pink coloured...
Intro: 1872. Origin: Turkey, especially in the wooded area of the Taurus Mountains. The soft pink, sometimes pink flowers often have a W-shaped spot on each lobe. The leaves are grey or cream mottled and slightly toothed. They often appear...
A form of C. cilicium with pure white flowers that appear from September to November. The small flowers with 15 to 20 mm long petals spread a delicious honey scent.
A Cyclamen similar to C. hederifolium, both of which are found wild in north-west Crete. The flowers appear in autumn, right after the first autumn rain has fallen. The pink-tinged flowers smell deliciously sweet at the time of flowering, the...
Origin: Western and Northern Cyprus, in forests with a rocky surface. It is an annual delight for the Cypriots when this fragrant cyclamen is blooming en masse in the autumn and winter. The flowers appear together with the leaves and are white or...
Origin: Corsica, Sardinia, southeastern France, Italy, large parts of the Balkans, Greece and western Turkey. This well-known cyclamen was reported under the name C. neapolitanum in 1538. From the flat tuber with its corky skin grow many 10-15 cm...
Origin: Corsica, Sardinia, southeastern France, Italy, large parts of the Balkans, Greece and western Turkey. This well-known cyclamen was reported under the name C. neapolitanum in 1538. From the flat tuber with its corky skin grow many 10-15 cm...
Intro: 1601. The flower colour is white, sometimes with a touch of pink. In the wild the white form is rarely found. The ivy-like leaves are decorative marbled and often variable. Hardy to -30 ° C.
Origin: Corsica , Sardinia, southeastern France , Italy, large parts of the Balkans, Greece and western Turkey. In 1538 this cyclamen was reported under the name C. neapolitanum. From the flat tuber surrounded by a corky skin, many 10-15 cm tall...
This beautiful, delicate cyclamen was collected by E.K. Balls near Burujuk, Northwestern Turkey in June 1934. Occurs on rocky limestone soil between the roots of trees (oaks). The scalloped leaves are dark green with silvery spots. The flower...
According to tradition, the first specimens were collected in 1901 in the southwest of Turkey (Anatolia) and imported via the former Smyrna (now Izmir) by the firm Van Tubergen. The dark green, serrated leaves are heart-shaped with irregular...
This pure white, very attractive form was not discovered in the wild until 1993. The fragrant flowers appear in autumn, often simultaneously with the newly formed, beautifully marbled leaves. Hardy to -18 ° C.
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...
Intro: 1753. Origin: large parts of Europe (including the British Empire), North Africa and West Asia. As the name implies, this is a species that blooms in late summer or autumn (autumnale) flowering. The narrow and grassy leaves appear before...
(Synonym: Barnardia japonica). A Scilla native to China and Japan, whose leaves develop late summer, just before the flower spikes appear. The purple-pink star-shaped flowers are only 5 mm and are densely packed. Besides being said to be...
A species discovered in 1976 by Brian Mathew and Baytop, named three years later. The only site found so far is in south-west Turkey, near Fethiye on the edge of cedar forests. The lovely, fragrant white flowers appear in winter, preceded by the...
Native to Karpathos, one of the twelve islands of the Dodecanese. First described in 1990. A fairly hardy miniature, which looks like a smaller version of S. lutea. Numerous bright yellow, slender flowers with elegantly protruding pistil and...
A spring-flowering Sternbergia, native to rocky slopes in among others Iran, the Kopet Dag to the Caucasus, Turkey and Syria. Collected from the northernmost population in Armenia. The yellow flowers have slender petals making them look like...