Showing posts with label Camellia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camellia. Show all posts

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Camellia "Pink Perfection"

For a Charlestonian I have a shocking disregard of the local popular plants.  I hate canna's, I don't grow meyer lemon trees or tea olives (yet), I dug up all the lantana kicking and screaming, and I own only one straggly camellia, a sasanqua, that while beautiful as can be, has scale so bad that I cannot get rid of it...after trying for three years.  I even broke down and used the evil stuff after the soakings in neem had no effect.  No dice there either... scale can get to such proportions that it can never be eradicated.  Sasanqua's are known for it.
Sasanqua off of the front porch in December.... lots of bloom almost no leaves!
Sorry for crappy quality...apparently I couldn't be bothered to open screened door.
The camellia, unfortunately, is going to die from this, and I think this is the year I'm going to put it out of its misery.  I already have 2 cuttings going so that I can keep the mystery cultivar though, because it is a very early bloomer (October) and blooms the same time the roses do in the fall, which is fantastic.   I actually prefer sasanquas in form, truth be told.

Even my scale has scale on the few remaining leaves
But, now that I'm working on the parking garden, which has a combination of half-day sun, and full light shade areas I have a space in which to add a few large bushes where they will have room to grow.   I've already placed 10 or so daylilies up near the front where the sun will shine, as well as a Carefree Beauty rose bush.  On the left side, by the white picket fence (you honestly can't get away from white picket fence-lines on my property) I've finally landed a few azaleas too.  What the area really needs are some large shrubs to hide the other neighbors hideous blank wall and the cars, and that is indeed the topic of this post, should I every decide to get to the point here.

Now, you might be wondering how it is that my one house can be surrounded by so many other houses, and you'd be right to wonder!  In Charleston, because it was built when we used to cook over open flames, the kitchens were often housed in their own building, as were carriages, and even the in-laws, if at all fiscally possible. This means most of the properties have dependencies, and most have long since been split into separate residences for us hoi palloi.  So anyhow, this explains it.  Both my house, and the one next to me, with the massive garage on the shady side of my garden, each are part of old urbans 'estates' that have dependencies.  Between me and my neighbors original properties there are six total houses, on very deep lots.  The lots here, tend to be very narrow and have no front yards (zero lot lines), but are about 3 times as deep as you'd expect.  One of these days, I'll have to draw it out for you, particularly as I start gardening on some of the 'shared' spaces.  (i.e. they are getting all my pink knockout roses that I want to replace with something else).  This also explains why there is such an abundance of fencing.  Good fences, as they say....

Now, to the point, finally: camellias.  As a rose lover you'd think I'd be all over these things, and I am, just they are expensive and I am slow to dig big holes.  But I have been planning on lots of camellias eventually, once I get around to some good shady spots.  Plus, they really are 25 to the block in every single color imaginable so I honestly can look out my living room windows and see some without having to plant anything.  Who was it that said something about incorporating the 'borrowed' views?

I brought my first camellia home today though, and its a beaut!  The local nursery's around here are chock a block with varieties because the bushes are so popular, so it was actually difficult to choose just one, but recently coming to peace with myself over the "buy large plant and wait 6 months to plant because dread digging the hole which takes hours" syndrome, I have decided that I can only buy one at a time.  If I plant it, I can go and get another.   Seeing as I'm not one of these people who wants another of the same kind, this really has no downside.



This is camellia "Pink Perfection", a japonica with nearly perfect flower form.  The buds are huge and heavy, the leaves larger than average, and the hole digging is going to be a doozy (its in a 7 gallon pot).    This is a relatively easy to get cultivar, supposedly a prolific bloomer, but very susceptible to root rot, so I hear, so not a good choice for clay soils.  My sand for soil on the other hand... will still need sphagnum to keep the thing from frying, I'm sure.


Here's what I hope mine looks like in years to come.

But for today, it still looks pretty good.  Though, its hole is not dug yet!




Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Pink Trees & Camellias Around The Block

Take a walk with me.
Down the sidewalk we have white flowers peeking out of iron fencework.   Whoa, don't clobber yourself on that shutter.


Ah, some beautiful Saucer Magnolias (Magnolia x. Soulangiana) are out on the left, and a beautiful camellia on the right.



Back across the street I spy some more Saucer Magnolias and some unknown pretty pink trees.




And there are no flowers yet here (though they have grand gardens) but look at this ridiculous (in a magnificent way) house!   I keep hoping to run into the owner at the grocery store so she'll invite me over to drinks and let me check out her (entirely walled) garden!

Continuing on, here's another camellia just about to break out and a little face on a palm tree guarding the house.


Rounding the next corner what do we have here?? A nearly perfectly round red bush.   The Queen of Hearts would be proud.  But wait... do I see a bit of white under that red!! oh, no!


One more bit of pink hanging out behind the aspidistra.  Oh, wait there's another hidden down a driveway.  He's looking mighty stripey.



Turning again on the next corner I see my favorite pink bush on the block though... the one in front of home sweet home.