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Les plantes vivent toujours
Evergreen South American bulb. The cultivar 'Alberto Castillo', has white, larger flowers and was collected in the 1980s by Alberto Castillo, the owner of Ezeiza Botanical Garden, from an abandoned garden in Buenos Aires.
Ipheion uniflorum is a free-blooming evergreen bulb from Argentina and Uruguay, with leaves smelling like garlic.
This selection of Ipheion has bright, deep blue overlapping perianth segments.
Bright blue selection of Ipheion uniflorum, a free-blooming evergreen bulb from Argentina and Uruguay, with leaves smelling like garlic. It blooms from late winter throughout spring.
Each bulb bears two lanceolate leaves per year and produces showy spikes of white flowers, about 20 cm tall in March or April, just before leaves die off.
Winter growing buln, native to sandy plains, each bulb bears two leaves. In February it produces showy spikes of sessile pink and purple flowers. It slowly clumps and will fill the pot in 3 or 5 years.
This is one of those American Amaryllids that drive collectors crazy. Each bulb produces one very large flower similar to Hymenocallis or Pancratium, but up to 18 cm in diameter!
No common name is enough for this bulb, which bears one of the most beautiful flowers on Earth. It is the showiest of the genus Lilium but it stands out because of its perfect adaptation to mediterranean climates: it sprouts a new rosettes in autumn, and keeps growing through the winter until it blooms and dies back to ground in early summer.
South african bulb with lovely glossy orange flowers with a dark brown centre. It is from a winter rainfall area in South Africa, so it goes dormant in Summer.
This Oxalis comes from an area in Chile with scarce winter rainfall, dry summers and abundant humidity in the air. It is a shrub, 1-2 m tall and ocasionally more, with succulent trifoliate leaves and abundant bright yellow flowers. Oxalis gigantea is the largest species in the genus. It is slow growing and long leaved.
Pack of 5 bulbs. A four-leaved lucky clover native to Mexico. Easy to grow. It is a people stopper, because all leaves are split in four. This species is also small and beautiful, in terms of leaves and flowers.
The most colourful leaf in the genus Oxalis! Three bright colours show up in one plant: each leaf has two colours: pink-purple and blue-purple, and flowers are pink. This species is native to southern South America and it is almost evergreen. It takes short light frost if kept in draining soil. It looks nice in individual pots or a standing-out fill-up...
Large white flowers occur at the peak of summer. Leaves are thick, typically curled, arranged in fans. They come out of very large bulbs. This plant is native to a small area of white sand beaches in the Caribbean. We offer almost-adult bulbs, that can flower in less than one year.
We offer an adult Bulb! This is an outstanding species in the genus Pancratium, the sea-daffodils. It is native to the Arabian deserts and it produces solitary flowers, about 10 cm large. It is the form from Yemen, and it is very hard to find in cultivation.
South american xerophytic bulb, with large, remarkable succulent leaves. The bulb is coated by papery brown sheaths and holds 1-4 leaves, but most often a pair of two. These are beautifully channeled, ovate-rounded, tongue-like. held on wide petioles.
Unusual cold-hardy Aroid with ornamental and weird inflorescences, up to 60 cm tall. Sauromatum venosum is summer growing and it rests in winter as an underground corm. In spring it wakes up showing a leopard-spotted spathe with a long dark spadix and for a few days they will produce a disgusting stink.
This Scadoxus produces one of the showiest inflorescence of all the South African flora: a large sphere of red flowers held on a long stalk , often compared to fireworks! Luckily, it is rather fast and easy to grow , especially in Mediterranean conditions.
The Sicilian Squill (Scilla sicula) is a bulbous herbaceous perennial (geophyte) with smooth elongate leaves pointed at the tip. It is distinguished by pale flowers and broad, marginally ciliate leaves (with a line of short, white hairs).
Clumping perennial, perfect in pots or in the rock garden. The leaves are green, with white to cream margins, holding beautiful lilac flowers. Tulbaghias are very easy to grow. They tolerate drought, frost and wet conditions. Flowers are edible, they taste much like garlic and they are popular in salads.
Pour le moment, il ya peu de produits dans cette catégorie Bulbes