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November/December 2002 Excerpt
Excerpt from Cold-Hardy Camellias by Kathleen Fisher
Thanks to the work of two devoted plant breeders, gardeners in cooler
regions can now enjoy these elegant fall- and spring-blooming shrubs.
Just as you can’t say “goatee” without stroking your chin, it’s almost
impossible to say “camellia” without a southern accent. If you grew up
north of the Mason-Dixon line, you may have worn ‘Pink Perfection’ to a
long-ago prom; it probably seemed as exotic as a rain-forest orchid. If
you hail from the former Confederacy, however, camellia growing may be a
competitive sport, with face-offs between miniatures like ‘Man Size’ or
the cabbage-size blooms of Camellia reticulata cultivars.
In the last two
decades, an effort has been underway to change the camellia's image,
with two breeders in particular working to prove that the camellia can
be a tough landscape workhorse rather than just a pampered show-pony.
Lucky Disasters
It was
unexpectedly harsh winters in the South and Mid-Atlantic that hastened
two breeders toward producing camellias that would survive outside
Scarlett O’Hara territory.
Clifford Parks had
started his career in the early 1960s at the Los Angeles State and
County Arboretum. There’s only one camellia he knows of that isn’t
completely hardy there, so to test for cold tolerance his program had to
ship all their plants to cooperators around the country, such as
Longwood Gardens in Pennsylvania. In 1967 he moved to the University of
North Carolina (UNC) and what seemed to be an only slightly more
challenging environment, with tens of thousands of camellias in tow.

Then in 1985, the
temperature in Chapel Hill dropped to 9 below, breaking the all-time
record by nine degrees and killing 98 percent of two acres of camellias
to the ground. Among the survivors were several selections of tea-oil
camellia (C. oleifera), already known to be tough, but also some of the
more showy Japanese camellia (C. japonica). From these came Parks’
spring-blooming ‘April’ series, introduced into the trade beginning in
1995.
In all, Parks has
named almost 100 varieties, but says even the most reliable of them
shouldn’t be considered bulletproof north of the warmer half of USDA
Zone 6—what earlier USDA hardiness zone maps called Zone 6b. Although
the most recent version of the USDA hardiness map no longer shows the
division of zones into two parts, the distinction between “a” and “b”
zones pops up often in the debate about where camellias will grow and
bloom reliably.
Says Parks: “The
new breed of camellias is just one step hardier” than their traditional
growing region—a line he describes as running from Winston-Salem, North
Carolina, to Richmond, Virginia, and up along the Atlantic Coast through
Washington, D.C., to Long Island—“although some people make claims to
more.”
Parks, who is now professor emeritus at UNC, doesn’t want buyers
misunderstanding the difference between plant hardiness and bud
hardiness, particularly among spring-flowering camellias, whose buds
have to withstand the vagaries of winter. But even if plants are root
hardy, winter damage can range from flowers that bloom but look ragged
and burned, through totally blitzed buds or scattered stem dieback, to
the shrub dying all the way to the ground.
"People at the
Arnold Arboretum outside Boston tell me, ‘Sure, we can grow camellias—as
herbaceous perennials,’” Parks relates. “If you live where the
temperature goes below zero frequently, you should be growing something
else.”
A half dozen years before Parks’ pivotal freeze, a series of mean
winters had wiped the U.S. National Arboretum’s collection of 956 mature
plants down to fewer than a dozen bedraggled specimens. Only one plant
remained blemish free and blooming its head off—a C. oleifera received
from China in 1948. Asians had been cultivating the species for some
5,000 years, not for show—since its flowers are unassuming—and its
leaves rather small, but for its seed oil, which they used for cooking
and cosmetics.
Nonetheless, this
climatic misfortune switched research horticulturist William Ackerman
and his colleagues into high gear. “We became opportunists,” he says,
capitalizing on this plant’s acclimatization through a broad swath of
Asia over the past several centuries. In the quarter century since, he’s
found that first survivor, later named ‘Lu Shan Snow’, and a second, C.
oleifera ‘Plain Jane’, to be perfect progenitors of exceptionally
cold-hardy landscape plants when crossed with showier autumn- and
spring-flowering camellias.
Just as Parks is
known best for his spring-flowering C. japonica ‘April’ series, Ackerman
is most famous for his C. oleifera fall bloomers. You’ll usually
recognize them from the word ‘Winter’ in their cultivar name, although
there are exceptions like ‘Ashton’s Pride’ and ‘Ashton’s Ballet’, which
are named for the Maryland farm to which he’s now officially retired. In
all, Ackerman can claim introducing 24 fall bloomers and 11
spring-flowering camellias in the trade.…
AHS members can view this article in its entirety by clicking here.
Sources:
Camellia Forest Nursery, Chapel Hill, NC. (919) 967-5529. Catalog $2.
Growing Camellias in Cold Climates by William Ackerman. Noble House,
Baltimore, Maryland, 2002.
Photos are by
April
Snow (David Parks) and Ashton’s Ballet (William Ackerman)
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