Which country do tulips come from




















Tulips are still very popular in the Netherlands and are even celebrated at festivals. There is also the Amsterdam Tulip Festival which takes place every year. The festival celebrates the famous flower and ensures it blooms all over the city. All throughout the first half of April, more than , colourful and rare tulips can be seen in the gardens of museums, private homes and other parts of Amsterdam.

The maternity ward where she was born had to be declared an international territory so she could inherit her Dutch citizenship from her mother, Princess Juliana. Each year as a sign of gratitude, the Dutch royal family sends 10, bulbs to Ottawa for the tulip festival.

Tulip petals are edible! During the Dutch famine of in WWII, people often had to resort to eating sugar beets and tulips. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. This site uses Akismet to reduce spam.

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Clusius was mostly interested in the tulip 's scientific importance, probably hoping to find medicinal uses for the bulbs. However, since people in Holland had seen the famous drawings, some became more interested in the flowers as money-makers for the developing ornamental floral trade.

Clusius fueled the fire by being very secretive and protective with his bulbs, and after awhile, the public was so determined to have the tulips that some were even stolen from his gardens. This was the beginning of the famous "Tulipomania.

Once a few bulbs got beyond the protective grasp of Clusius, they were considered very precious rarities. As a trade in the bulbs began, the prices began to rise. Through the early 's the prices skyrocketed as an actual trading market developed. As the hybrids became more and more glamorous, the limited supply of certain bulbs became highly prized by the rich, who ultimately, were willing to pay almost any price.

It was an incredible bubble, and it was about to burst. During the s, the frenzy continued as notarized bills of sale were being issued for bulbs, fraud and speculation were rampant, and what always happens with financial "bubbles" happened. The crash came in Many rich traders became paupers overnight, and the prices finally settled at a much more practical level. Of course, all this did not reduce the real demand, the love of the sheer beauty of the flowers.

So ever since those days, the enterprising Dutch have built one of the best organized production and export businesses in the world.

Today, over nine billion flower bulbs are produced each year in Holland, and about 7 billion of them are exported, for an export value of three quarters of a billion dollars. Daffodil , Narcissus , Jonquil. First, let's settle the names. The official botanical name of the whole genus is Narcissus.

Daffodil is the common name. Jonquil is a "species name" within the Narcissus genus. This means that certain daffodils are called Narcissus jonquilla. Some people, particularly in our Southern states, use Jonquil as a common name for the whole genus, but it's really the species name for a minor group having multiple smaller flowers on each stem.

So when you're using the common name, all colors, sizes and types are daffodils. If you get into the botanical or Latin names, they all begin with Narcissus the "genus" and end with a different "species" name. The famous Poet's Daffodil , for example, is Narcissus poeticus. It has that name simply because Linneaus, the person who devised our botanical nomenclature, decided that a certain wild species white petals with a small bright-colored center was the one that inspired the ancient tale of Narcissus, handed down by the poets since ancient Greek times.

See photos below. And as mentioned, a small, multi-flowered yellow daffodil type is botanically Narcissus jonquilla. Of course, you don't need to know the botanical names to enjoy daffodils.

Just choose the colors and types you like. But the story of Narcissus is interesting. Remember Narcissus? Know people who are narcissistic? In the 20th century it was discovered that the frilly petals and dramatic flames that gave some varieties their stunning look, were in fact the symptoms of an infection by the mosaic virus. The healthy flowers were supposed to be solid, smooth and monotone.

The virus came to the tulip from a louse living on peaches and potatoes. These diseased varieties are no longer sold, what you can find is hybrids that look similar but are genetically stable! Nowadays, there are many different tulip varieties to choose from browse our range of tulips for inspiration , and you can still buy some of the original 'wild' varieties, often called 'species' tulips see our range of wild tulip bulbs.

Introduction to Europe The flowers were introduced into Western Europe and the Netherlands in the late 16th century, probably by Carolus Clusius, who was a biologist from Vienna.

Tulipomania Botanists started to hybridize the flower and they soon found ways of making even more decorative and tempting specimens. Hybrids in the 20th century In the 20th century it was discovered that the frilly petals and dramatic flames that gave some varieties their stunning look, were in fact the symptoms of an infection by the mosaic virus.

A flourishing Tulip trade developed in the Netherlands thanks to an ideal growing climate and the business instincts of the Dutch. Here, he received Tulip bulbs from another Flemish scientist, named De Busbecq, who had become a friend. At one point, Clusius left for Holland and took along some of the bulbs.

In , he became a professor at the University of Leiden and also the head of the Hortus Botanicus, which was founded in



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