|
Contents
Lu Shan Snow--the Forgotten
Camellia

Lu Shan Snow camellia.
(K8235-1)
|
Fifty years ago, Camellia seeds designated only as plant introduction (PI)
number 162475 traveled from China to make their American debut at the U.S.
National Arboretum in Washington, D.C.
The seeds were started in a greenhouse. But the resulting small trees had
simple, white flowers and weren't as exciting as their showy, colorful cousins,
Camellias sasanquas. So poor little PI 162475 was planted on a lower,
less-traveled path, surrounded by the other trees.
The unremarkable camellia was soon forgotten.
But 30 years later, severe winter storms killed the neighboring C.
sasanquas. In all, the harsh winters of 1977 to 1979 annihilated more than
950 camellias in the arboretum's Asian garden.
When the stately C. sasanquas lining the lower path were killed, PI
162475 was revealed. Not only did it survive, but it graced the garden with
snow-white blooms in the following years. Later, this plain but strong-willed
survivor would become the ancestor of a colorful, new cold-hardy camellia
dynasty.
During the killing winters, William Ackerman was a horticultural expert at
the arboretum, which is part of USDA's Agricultural Research Service. He was
involved in a breeding program to develop more cold-hardy camellias. This
garden Cinderella with the scientific name of Camellia oleifera was just
what he needed.
Yet Ackerman realized much had to be done to make this plant's progeny
market-ready. It was hardy--but a little homely in the eyes of camellia
connoisseurs. The plant's flowers fell apart at a touch. Snowy white petals on
an autumn breeze may be poetic, but a quality plant keeps its blossoms. Plus,
American consumers want colorful camellias with multiple petals.
As work began on crossing this plant, it was decided that it should have a
proper name. "Lu Shan Snow" was selected in honor of the original
location where the seed had been collected in China.
Introduced from the Lu Shan Botanical Garden in Kuling, China, Lu Shan Snow
can survive temperatures as low as -15oF. That's USDA plant
hardiness zones 6a to 5b. The average camellia can't handle temperatures much
below 5oF.
Chinese growers value C. oleifera for its seeds, which are pressed to
make cooking oils, hair tonics, and cosmetics. But its future in America would
be strictly ornamental. In 1979, Ackerman began crossing Lu Shan Snow with
popular cultivars and released new cultivars beginning in 1986.
Ackerman also used another cold-hardy C. oleifera from Nanking,
China, and it was also introduced in 1979. The resulting 2,500 seedling progeny
have been field-tested for 16 years. The five most cold tolerant are Ashton's
Pride, Winter's Beauty, Winter's Interlude, Winter's Rose, and Winter's
Waterlily.
"What Bill did was a lot of hybridization, coming out with 20 new
cultivars that could go down to -10oF to -15oF,"
says Ray Bond, of Bond Nursery Corp. in Dallas, Texas. "When he wrote
about those hybrids in Horticulture in 1993, there was a huge demand.
Everybody wanted these flowers, and nobody had them."
Camellias were once considered a "perk" of southern living. Today,
gardeners as far north as coastal Massachusetts enjoy them, thanks to
Ackerman's breeding efforts.
Bond says the Ackerman lines are so desired by residents in one Pennsylvania
town that the nursery sells out almost as fast as he can ship them. That's
because when people move there from the South, they want to bring their beloved
camellias. Now they can.--By Jill
Lee, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
William Ackerman is retired. Further information can be obtained from
Tomas S. Elias, director of the U.S. National Arboretum,
3501 New York Ave., NE, Washington, DC 20002-1958; phone (202) 245-4539, fax
(202) 245-4575.
"Lu Shan Snow--the Forgotten Camellia" was published in the
October 1998 issue of Agricultural Research magazine. Click here to see this
issue's table of contents.
[Top]
|