Old House Gardens
From America’s Expert Source for Heirloom Flower Bulbs
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MRS. LANGTRY, 1869        Rarest
Named for Lily Langtry, the spirited actress whose affair with King-to-be Edward VII titillated Victorian England, this rare beauty has milk-white petals and a crinkled canary cup that matures to cream. Guy Wilson, famed breeder of new daffodils, wrote in 1929, “I hope we shall not lose altogether some of the older flowers of such undeniable beauty and grace as ‘Mrs. Langtry’.” 2 W-WWY, 18-20 inches, zones 5-7bS/9WC, from Holland’s greatest daffodil collector. Chart to compare.
DA48Add to basket:3/$12.505/$2010/$3725/$84.5050/$156
NIVETH, 1931        Rarest
This refined, up-town cousin of everybody’s favorite ‘Thalia’ sets the hearts of daffodil connoisseurs aflutter. It’s sublimely graceful, with smoother, thicker, more rounded petals of a white that expert Michael Jefferson-Brown calls “dazzling in its purity.” 5 W-W, 18-20 inches, zones 5-8aS/10WC, from Pennsylvania. Chart to compare.
DA994Add to basket:3/$17.505/$2810/$5225/$11850/$219
ORNATUS, 1870
This is not your usual pheasant’s-eye! It’s the earliest blooming of that season-ending clan, two weeks ahead of our traditional pheasant’s-eye, N. p. recurvus (below). And though it’s hardy to -15° F, it thrives in Southern heat that’s often death to its kin. With snowy white petals, a small yellow eye ringed with red-orange, and lavish fragrance. 9 W-YYR, 16-18 inches, zones 5-7bS/9WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
DA69Add to basket:5/$14.5010/$27.5025/$62.5050/$116100/$215
N. poeticus recurvus, PHEASANT’S EYE, 1600, 1831
The poet’s narcissus grows wild in alpine meadows from Spain into the Balkans and is pictured in English herbals of the early 1600s. This form is the oldest available and, though it dates officially to 1831, it’s indistinguishable from those in colonial gardens. It’s famously fragrant and late-blooming, with sparkling white petals that arch back from a “green eye and crimson-fringed crown” (William Robinson). 13 W-YYR, 12-14 inches, zones 4-6bS/8WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
DA30Add to basket:5/$12.2510/$2325/$52.5050/$98100/$182
N. gayi, PRINCEPS, 1830        Web-Only & Rarest
Extra-early and extra-beautiful, this wildflowery trumpet daffodil is a bicolor N. pseudonarcissus (see Lent lily). Millions were once harvested for bouquets sold in London’s Covent Garden, and it’s great for naturalizing. Daffodil connoisseur Alec Gray wrote in 1955, “A drift of it is a thing of... lightness and grace.” 1 W-Y, 14-16 inches, zones 5-8aS/10WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
DA31Add to basket:3/$12.755/$2010/$3825/$86
N. jonquilla ‘Flore Pleno’, QUEEN ANNE’S DOUBLE JONQUIL, 1611        Rarest & New
True stock! Looking like prom dresses for honeybees, these tiny, exquisite flowers are fluffy with extra petals, swooningly fragrant, and so rare we haven’t offered them since 1997. Don’t be fooled by sources that sell the much larger, cheaper ‘Double Campernelle’ (N. x odorus ‘Plenus’) as ‘Queen Anne’s Double Jonquil’. It’s not! 4Y-Y, 8-10 inches, zones 6-8bS/10WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
DA22Add to basket:3/$14.505/$2310/$4325/$9850/$181
QUEEN OF THE NORTH, 1908
With her elegant, rounded, snow-white petals and fluted lemon cup, this Queen is as cool as a frosty glass of lemonade. “Certainly one of the most beautiful of all daffodils,” the great plantsman John Wister wrote in 1930, and she’s still winning blue ribbons today! 3 W-Y, 16-18 inches, zones 4-7S/9WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
DA33Add to basket:3/$12.505/$2010/$3725/$84.5050/$156
RED DEVON, 1943
This fiery jewel won major awards in 1950, 1968, 1977, 1985, and the RHS AGM – one of gardening’s highest accolades – in 1993. With yellow petals and a broad, ruffled cup dipped in incandescent orange, it brings wonderful energy to the spring garden. Named for the historic red cattle of Devonshire, and we get a kick out of that, too. 2 Y-O, 24-26 inches, zones 5-7S/9WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
DA85Add to basket:5/$12.2510/$2325/$52.5050/$98100/$182
RIP VAN WINKLE, 1884
‘Rip’ is a cutie. Early and dwarf, its spiky little blooms look like tiny yellow suns, cactus dahlias, sea anemones, or even mop-headed elves – depending on your imagination. It’s also cheap and wonderfully easy to force. 4 Y-Y, 6-8 inches, zones 4-7bS/9bW, from Holland. Chart to compare.
DA34Add to basket:10/$10.5025/$2450/$45100/$84250/$189
ROSE OF MAY, 1950        Rarest
True stock! As fragrant as any rose, this smooth, elegant, double pheasant’s-eye was bred by Guy Wilson, the shy Irish fellow who gave the world ‘Broughshane’ and dozens of other impeccable daffodils. With blowsy whorls of ivory white petals loosely arranged around the center, it looks like an old-fashioned rose, too. 4 W-W, 16-18 inches, zones 4-6bS/8WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
DA997Add to basket:3/$11.505/$18.5010/$3425/$77.5050/$144
Page 6 of Heirloom Daffodil Bulbs       << Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next >>
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