Showing posts with label camellia sasanqua. Show all posts
Showing posts with label camellia sasanqua. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day January 2014

About time I started blogging again and what better way to return than another 15th of the month Garden Blogger's Blooms Day.

It's bleak midwinter here in Plymouth.  Cool, wet and, occasionally icy.  No snow but we'll probably get some before winter's passage.  I just hope it doesn't go on as long as last year.

So, very little in flower, but what there is is interesting.  Starting with my Camellia sasanqua on the shed wall:

Camellia sasanqua combined with Clematis cirrhosa 'Freckles' on the shed wall
It's flowered well this winter, starting in late November, peaking in December and with buds still opening.  Intertwined is Clematis cirrhosa 'Freckles'.  This photo was actually taken late last year but the effect is still the same.  Oddly, none of my other camellias are showing anything but tight buds.  Maybe they know something about the coming weather that I don't.

Meanwhile, on the windowsill in Maria's workroom - she and the younger daughter make custom designed jewellery (https://www.facebook.com/chainmailled ) - Alocasia x calidora, a large leaved arum that I use for exotic interest in the summer garden, flowered to produce a pair of typical arum spathes.  This has lasted till today.

Alocasia x calidora flower spathe
Iris unguicularis  has been flowering on and off for a few weeks now.  The clump usually looks very untidy by this time of year - I needed to strip it before I could get a shot - but the flowers are fresh and bright and a welcome mid winter sight.

Iris unguicularis
Finally, winter jasmine, Jasminium nudiflorum, is still bravely putting on a winter show under the living room window.  I think it's probably hardier than I am.

Winter jasmine, Jasminium nudiflorum
As always, click the pictures to embiggen.

As ever, my thanks to May Dreams Gardens for hosting the Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day meme.  Head over there to see what's flowering in many more gardens round the world. 

PS

Sorry about the visible watermarks.

/Rant begins

It has been necessary due to the continued theft of images by large, commercial, for profit, websites who steal without payment or credit and then expect to get away with their copyright infringement simply by taking the images down when contacted.  Unfortunately, that's no longer an option.  If you are a commercial business* you will be invoiced at the exactly the same rate as if you had licensed any of my images currently available through Alamy.  Plus damages.  Plus my lawyer's fees.  Plus expenses.

Which all sounds very threatening.  It's meant to be.  Sorry, but stealing my images to increase your profits means you have lost the right to negotiate on price - and, trust me, it's far cheaper to settle quickly before my lawyers get involved.  And, whatever you do, don't strip the metadata or remove my copyright notice.  I could end up owning your whole company.

Rant over/

*Hobbyist, enthusiast bloggers are not businesses.  Just ask for permission.  Tiny, specialist nurseries deserve every support they can get and will always get highly preferential rates.  In fact, if there are any in Devon or Cornwall who would be interested in exchanging photographic access to the nursery for high quality images for use in your advertising please let me know on johnrichmond100@gmail.com.











Wednesday, February 8, 2012

On cold and camellias

We've just had a - hopefully brief - cold snap.  Down to -7C according to the sensor in Maria's car last Friday morning.  It's the first serious frost of the winter but has hit just when the camellias are coming into their full display.

I've got six in the garden and, successively, they give me colour from November to April.  The season starts with a Camellia sasanqua variety (I've lost the label but I think it's Shishi Gashira).  It's trained against a west facing wall and is now in semi shade so doesn't flower as freely as it should.  Even so, the relatively small, deep pink, semi double flowers are a welcome sight in November and December.  This one usually manages to avoid the flower damage a period of frost can bring.  But others are not so lucky.

Camellia sasanqua variety
Camellia 'Cornish Snow' I've blogged about before but this winter it started flowering in November and has carried on as the days have got colder.  Because we haven't had a sub zero frost until late last week the flowers have remained undamaged and really have brightened the darker months of December and January. 

Camellia 'Cornish Snow'
Which brings me to the ones that have just begun their flowering season.  These are all varieties of Camellia x williamsii, offspring of the many times repeated C.saluenensis / C.japonica cross that has yielded hundreds of free flowering, hardy and very desirable camellias since it was first tried at Caerhays (a famous Cornish garden) in 1923.

'St Ewe' was the first in flower, just after Christmas.  It has perfect single flowers and a long season from January to April with me.  Like all the C. x williamsii hybrids it has the invaluable ability to shed dead and frosted flowers of it's own accord.  The buds are frost resistant.  The flowers are not.  We get short periods of freezing weather so, inevitably, some flowers get frosted.  With the x williamsii varieties these will soon drop to be replaced by the next set of buds.  With other camellias - notably C.japonica - the dead flowers hang on and on - the bush becomes very unsightly.

Camellia 'St Ewe'
Next off the blocks this year was 'Donation', one of the best known of all camellias.  Hardly surprising.  The combination of prolific flowering and attractive blooms is attractive to anyone with the required acid soil.  The neat shrub form - though it can certainly grow large in time - provides additional attraction throughout the year.

Camellia x williamsii 'Donation'
The final one to flower is the heavily doubled 'Anticipation'.  My shrub is about 8ft / 2.5 metres high after 14 years and flowers profusely, brightening the late winter/early spring days.

Camellia x williamsii 'Anticipation'
Superb camellias and well worth the space the occupy in my small garden.

But the season doesn't stop here.  In a month the fat buds of my single Camellia japonica  variety will be open to produce absolutely formal semi double pink flowers.  It was sold to me as a variety it's definitely not.  I think it may be 'Magnoliaeflora' but I can't be certain.  Whatever it is, its small flowers are a definite adornment although a single night's frost can cover the bush with blossoms gone to brown decay.

Camellia japonica - a white semi double, possibly Magnoliaeflora'
Even out of flower camellias look good with their simple, glossy evergreen leaves and neat habits.  But, even with the continued risk of frost and snow, now is their season and now is their true delight to be seen.  I'll be visiting local gardens over the next couple of months and they will be in full flower, a beautiful start to the new year.