Japanese Camellia, Camellia japonica. American
gardeners in the South know and love the Camellia japonica, a landscape
shrub, bush, or tree that can grow 20 feet tall. The Camellia japonica
became an important garden landscape plant in the World War II war
years in the 1940's when Dr. Tom Brightwell collected a large Camellia
cultivar planting at the University of Georgia Experimental Station at
Tifton, Georgia, that is still actively maintained as a Camellia
arboretum for gardeners to tour publicly and to compare varieties,
color of flower blooms, flower size, and flower density studies.
Several hundred Camellia shrubs, bushes, and trees are planted and
growing at the Tifton, Georgia location. Camellia japonica was the
favorite flowering plant of Dr. Tom Brightwell, although he planted
Camellia Sasanqua trees and bushes also in the garden. Dr. Brightwell
not only planted Camellia seed, but he selected the outstanding
cultivars and grafted or budded those Camellia varieties named by him
onto Camellia seedling rootstock.
Several other well known
Camellia gardens are located in the United States; The Burden Center at
Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Bellingrath Gardens at Theodore, Alabama; The
City Park at New Orleans, Louisiana; Clemson, South Carolina Botanical
Gardens; Atlanta, Georgia, Botanical Garden; Harry P. Leu Gardens,
Orlando, Florida; The United States National Arboretum, Washington
D.C.; Thomas H. Perkins III Camellia Garden, Brookhaven, Mississippi;
Huntington Camellia Garden, California; Massee Lane Camellia Garden,
Fort Valley, Georgia; and the Vale Camellia Garden, Waltham,
Massachusetts.
The Massee Lane Camellia garden was donated as the
headquarters for the American Camellia Society organized in 1945. The
Camellia japonica shrubs, bushes, and trees are planted under the shade
of pine trees and flowering Southern Magnolia trees as shading that is
required for the best Camellia plant growth. The 9 acre Camellia tree
garden is bordered by brick walkways, where over 1000 Camellia shrubs
and trees can be viewed and enjoyed by the public during the fall,
winter, and spring.
Dr. Tom Brightwell of the Tifton, Georgia
Camellia garden exchanged Camellia plants with the land donor of Massee
Camellia gardens, Mr. David C. Strother. Dr. Brightwell also researched
the Camellia and exchanged Camellia cultivars with William Hertrich of
Huntington Camellia Gardens in Los Angeles, California and with
numerous Camellia researchers at Massee Lane Gardens, 100 Massee Lane,
Fort Valley, Georgia, the headquarters of the American Camellia Society.
The
Huntington Botanical Garden in Los Angeles, California boasts a
Camellia garden of 1200 different cultivars of Camellia japonica and
Camellia sasanqua that covers twelve acres for public viewing of the
Camellia blooms during the flowering season. The superintendent, Mr.
William Hertich, of the Camellia garden planted thousands of Camellia
seed to be used as a rootstock on grafting superior Camellia cultivars.
These seedling rootstock resulted in the growth and selection of
hundreds of new hybrid Camellia selections, many of which still grow at
the garden today. William Hertich devoted many years of his life
growing and photographing the Camellia trees and flowers. Mr. Hertich
published his work on the Camellia plant in 3 volumes at the Huntington
Camellia Gardens.
Other very large Camellia gardens outside the
United States are the Peter Fisher Camellia Garden in Hamburg, Germany
and the Royal Botanical Camellia Garden in Melbourne, Australia. The
Higo Camellia bonsai Camellia plants from Japan can be seen at the
Huntington Camellia Gardens along with aromatic, fragrant Camellia
cultivars and a large collection of Camellia Sasanqua introductions
from Nuccio's Nursery of Altadena, California. A new important book by
Ann Richardson, A curator's Introduction to the Camellia Collection,
can be purchased from the Huntington Library Press for $14.95 and is
filled with valuable information for any lover of the Camellia flower,
tree, or plants.
Growing Camellia plants into trees takes many
years unless you buy a large flowering size Camellia tree that can be
very expensive.. Very few perennial evergreen shrubs display the
beautiful form in the landscape and the massing flowering habit of the
Camellia. The Camellia japonica has the flower colors of pink, red,
white, purple, and peppermint. The Camellia japonica can begin blooming
as early as December and continues into March and April on some
varieties, depending on weather warm-ups during the winter. Camellia
shrubs and trees resent being transplanted in the landscape from one
spot to another, and often die unless transplanting takes place during
the winter. Even then, the Camellia does not transplant well, and can
sit inert in a location showing little growth, if any, and many times
will decline in size or die unless a large root-ball is dug. Camellia
plants should be purchased from a nursery growing in a container, so
that a full root system can be planted and grown. Never buy a Camellia
plant bare root!
Camellia shrubs and trees prefer light or heavy
shade for growing, and pine trees or flowering magnolia trees are the
perfect companion plants for the Camellia shrub. Full sun will burn the
leaves of a Camellia shrub except for interior leaves and no one wants
a plant looking like that in a landscape garden. The discovery of the
plant hormone, gibberellic acid, with its accelerative growth effect on
individual flowers of the Camellia became an important method of
winning prizes at Camellia flower shows. A normal Camellia flower,
teacup size, could be treated with a drop of gibberellic acid at an
inferior (lower) bud, and the teacup size flower would continue to grow
to the size of a dinner plate. This treatment process has become
important in treating other plant products to increase growth size of
flowers, fruits, leaves, and in rooting hormone mixtures and seed
germination.
A unique characteristic of both the Camellia
japonica and Camellia sasanqua is the beautiful and spectacular
bloom-drop circle that forms beneath the tree, surrounding the plant
after older flowers fall and shatter on the ground. The glow of the
fallen petals in the circle increases as the season progresses and many
gardener's view the bloom-drop circle as fanciful and beautiful as the
fresh flowers remaining on the tree. The Camellia Sasanqua is often and
commonly called simply, Sasanqua. The Sasanqua flower colors of red,
white, pink, purple, and peppermint are the same colors, but smaller
than the Camellia japonica blooms. The Camellia Sasanqua can grow 16
feet tall and blooms earlier (October to March) than Camellia japonica.
The leaves are a glowing waxy green and evergreen with a slight curving
habit. Single red, white, or pink flowers of Sasanqua are preferred by
most buyers, but double flowering Sasanqua is stunning when in full
bloom. The Sasanqua provides a perfect specimen landscape plant that
will tolerate full sun, and is most often used in Zone 6-9 as a privacy
hedge for screening out noisy neighbors.
Learn more about various plants, or purchase ones mentioned in this article by visiting the author's website: TyTy Nursery