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
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.
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.
Intro: 1843. Origin: Greece and the island of Crete. Initially C. cartwrightianus was considered to be C. sativus they are closely related to each other. Flower and leaves appear simultaneously. The pure white flowers are accentuated by three...
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...
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...
A highly variable form originally collected among the ruins of ancient Ariasos north of Antalya. The range comes from a form selected by Václav Jošt: the flowers are fragrant, mostly five per tuber, lilac-pink. C. pallassi is named after the...
Pulchellus means wonderful or beautiful, hence the (Dutch) commonly used name: pracht-crocus (pomp crocus). An eye-catcher introduced by Mr Tom Hoog. Elegant large white flowers with an unusual pearl grey glow. The throat is yellow with a hint of...
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...
The saffron crocus. It is generally believed that C. sativus is a form of C. cashmirianus. The flower colour is lilac-purple with beautiful veins. The relatively large orange-red stigmas usually protrude above the flower and seems like they only...
Intro: 1977. Origin: Portugal, north of Lisbon, in northwest Spain in the La Guardia area and southwest in the province of Cadiz. The flowers of this fragrant crocus are dark purple with dark stripes. The centre is white to very pale yellow.
An easy-growing autumn crocus, native to the Crimea, Caucasus, Turkey and Iran. However, several forms of C. speciosus occur in this large area, which Janis Ruksans divides into several species, subspecies, types. He devotes several pages to this...
A form of C. speciosus cultivated in the Netherlands in 1913 by Van Tubergen. White flowers with an orange throat, easily growing. Incidentally, no pure white form is found in wild populations.
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...