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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 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...
Gorgeous multi-flowered tulip with silver-pink flowers, adorned with some greenery on the outside of the petals. Once the flower opens, the soft blue centre appears, edged with a fine white line. Originating from the Ornamental Plants Test Centre,...
In honour of the 425th anniversary of the Hortus Botanicus in Leiden, this pink, multi-flowered, low tulip was named in 2015. Although he was not the first to introduce the tulip to the Netherlands, Carolus Clusius, the first prefect of the Hortus...
The wild form is found in the Tien Shan mountains on grassy and rocky slopes. 'Ice Stick' was selected from the wild by the Botanical Garden in Tashkent. Introduced and registered in the Netherlands by Janis Ruksans and J.S. Pennings. Stands out...
Intro 1877. Origin: Central Asia around the Tien Shan mountains. Named after Dr Albert von Regel, physician and noted collector of tulips. Flowers are shiny vermillion-red, orange or sometimes yellow. Striking dark spots at the base, sometimes...
Introduced by H. Elwes in 1880, but discovered in 1838 by Pierre Aucher - Eloy. Origin: Iran and Syria. The two to five grey-green, wavy leaves are about 15 cm long. One to three pink flowers with pointed petals and a yellow-brown heart. The...
A new tulip created at the Centre for Plant Breeding and Reproduction Research. Slender flowers on a dark flower stem, coloured bronze-yellow on the outside, tapering to pinkish red. The inside of the flower shows purplish-red spots from the heart...
A salmon-coloured pride from the hands of J. de Winter, registered in 1999. Received a Certificate of Approval from the Trial Garden K.A.V.B. in the same year. Salmon orange flowers with a warm orange blush.
Intro: 1802, , descriptions date from the 16th century. Lady Tulip or Candy Tulip. Origin: Northeast Afghanistan and Kashmir (growing wild in some places), southern France and the Greek islands. In Europe they were spread by hitchhiking in the...
A multi-flowered cultivar, registered in 2017 by W. van Lierop & Zn. B.V. The flower starts light salmon pink and turns to fuchsia pink. Beautiful is the contrast of the purple to black centre, which is visible when the flowers open.
A vigorously growing clone, strikingly larger than the species. The beautifully shaped flowers are slightly more bulbous and larger, but the brilliant colour combination, pinkish red with white and the fantastic dark centre are unmistakable. The...
Introduced by Van Tubergen in 1959. The cream yellow flowers have a red glow with a green edge on the outside of the petals. The anthers are also green. Award of Garden Merit in 1999. A whole new application for the Tulipa is planting it in the...
A mixture featuring several cultivars of Tulipa clusiana. A colourful spectacle that, when planted in a sunny spot, has a long flowering period and returns several years. Also combines well with earlier flowering bulbous plants such as Chionodoxa,...
A fascinating selection from Tulipa cretica found in the mountains of Crete, around Kisamos, Lapsili, Mount Ida, Cape Malacca, Sitra and Akrotiri,
near scrub. Very soft pink, almost white flowers up to three on a single stem, with a pink blush on...
Also a hybrid from Tulipa cretica, multi-flowered, up to three flowers per flower stalk. Star-shaped, soft pink flowers, which are still white when budding. From the brownish-purple flower stalk, there is a soft bluish-purple glow over the...
An ornamental tulip that buds from a narrow pointed bud. Common in southern Europe, especially in the Savoys. First described in 1846 by Alexis Jordan, one of the first Neo-tulips described as a species. The flowers are usually dark pinkish-red,...
Tulipa eichleri, as cultivated in the Netherlands, is an unknown species from Central Asia. Clare Benedict is a 1956 hybrid with striking, bright scarlet flowers with a black centre. Great for naturalising in a sunny position in permeable soil.
Intro: 1874. Origin: Greece, Crete and near Izmir (Turkey). Named after Friedrich Hager by Theodor von Heldreich, both of whom introduced the little tulip. The bell-shaped flowers have a colour that is a cross between copper and scarlet with a...
Intro: around 1989. Collected in northwestern Iran. This very beautiful little tulip becomes a true eye-catcher in early April. Once the elegant white flowers open, they show a steel blue heart. Award of Merit by the R.H.S. in 1989.
Striking dwarf tulip with intense magenta-purple flowers, the base is striped green on the outside. The large heart has a buttercup-yellow colour. From the hands of Visser Czn, 1976.
Introduced in 1975 by Grullemans, ended up via W. Lemmers at Fisherman Czn. where it was named. The sepals are magenta pink with a green glow on the outside and cyclamen purple on the inside. The heart is buttercup yellow.
This abandonment was found by Kesteloo Bloembollen in a batch of T. humilis 'Persian Pearl'. The outside of the red petals give a silvery impression. When the flower opens, the dark purple-red centre with its yellow base stands out. A beautiful...
In 2009, Dr Ben Zonneveld conducted research on the genome size of wild tulips. For that research, more than 400 wild tulips from Europe and Asia were obtained. One of the species discovered in the study was T. lemmersii from the Mashad pass in...
Origin: high in the mountains of Tajikistan, highly variable but always red. The narrow, corrugated, grey-green leaves have red edges and form a rosette. The wonderful scarlet flower with pointed petals is slightly lighter towards the edge and...
T. mauritiana is a late-flowering species from the Savoys in eastern France. First described in 1858. In 1979, it was Visser Czn who found this little-offered obliteration. The outside of the flower shows a lemon-yellow flame on a primrose-yellow...
This multi-flowering little tulip has yellow flowers with red tips, with on the outer petals a hint of green and orange. The heart and the anthers are bronze. Locations of the variable species are mainly western Turkey, Greece and Bulgaria....
A rather rare species about which not much can be found in the literature yet. Native to the mountains of Tajikistan, closely related to T. orythioides. The large white star-shaped flowers have a yellow centre halfway up the petals and are borne...
Intro: 1885. Origin: Northern Iran and northwestern Afghanistan. A multi-flowering, only 10-15 cm high tulip. When the sun shines, they look like a bunch of 'stars'. The flower colour is white with some violet on the outer petals. Both the base...
A Fusilier was a type of soldier from the end of the 17th century and was named after his weapon, the 'fusil', a flintlock musket. A fancy name for this fiery, multi-flowered little tulip. From every bulb grow five to seven flowers. A cultivar of...
A Neo-tulip. Origin: France, especially near St.-André, the Savoys. A very rare species with large blood-red round petals, the centre is yellow and embellished with olive-green spots. Late flowering, May-June.
T. saxatilis has been known since the early 17th century. At that time it was called 'The Tulip of Candie' (Candie or Candia is the old name for Crete). Reintroduced in 1870 by George Maw. Origin: Crete. Six to twelve green leaves form a rosette....
Intro: 1894. Was found in the Pontic Mountains near Amasya in Turkey. Of all species Tulipa this one flowers latest, late May, early June. The slim, bright red-orange flower grows above the long and narrow shiny green leaves. The backs of the...
Origin: Western Iran and northern Iraq. Named after Otto O. Stapf (1857-1933), a botanist who has studied the genus Tulipa genus his whole life. Dark crimson-scarlet, cup-shaped flowers with a dark violet spot in the heart. That spot is sometimes...
A tulip from Central Asia, especially in the Pamir Mountains. Described in 1971 by Vvedenski in the herbarium Flora Asiae Mediae. One to two flowers appear on the 10-15 cm long flower stalk, white with a yellow centre, mottled purple-green on the...
Introduction: 1933. Before that, it was known under the name T. dasystemon. Origin: Tien Shan. Its four to seven tortuous, shiny leaves form a rosette. The up to six -two or three on average- star-shaped flowers are so close together that they...
Intro: 1875. Origin: Central Asia, Turkestan and northwest China. One of the earliest flowering species. The leaves are grey-green in colour and the 20 cm high flower stem is hairy. The twelve tapered white flowers with oval petals have a...
Intro 1967. A rarely offered species from Iran, Kohsh Jelagh and Haraz valley, Olang Pass in the Elburz Mountains. The long, slender, grey-green leaves stay low to the ground. The flowers are a gleaming warm red, and when they open as a cup, not...
Intro: 1929. Origin: Western Turkey. Named after Edward Whittall who had a nursery near Izmir. The name was already used in 1920 but registred in 1940. This small tulip that blooms in April has bright orange inner petals with a dark glow towards...
A new species from the eastern Chatkal Mountains in Kyrgyzstan, introduced by J.J. de Groot and K.S. Tojbaev. Initially thought to be a form of T. ferganica, but given its different growing conditions - this tulip grows among shrubs in a partially...