On 2013-10-20 11:36:59 +0100, Jeff Layman said:
On 20/10/2013 09:57, Sacha wrote:
On 2013-10-19 20:58:53 +0100, Jeff Layman said:
http://tinypic.com/r/cnuwj/5
Photographed yesterday in Palmerston Park, Southampton. Apologies for
the pic size and quality (mobile phone was playing up).
The shrub was about 2 metres high and 1.5 - 2 across. Flowers were
about 7 cm across, with very prominent stamens. No scent.
It is very attractive, especially as not very much flowers at this time
of year (but I've seen quite a few shrubs flowering at the wrong time
recently). What is it?
It's hard to tell from the pic but it could be a Camelia, flowering
either very early or in a second and less vigorous flush. Our Hamamelis
mollis is flowering now still with half dead leaves on it!
Good point - I hadn't thought of it being a Camellia. Is there one with
such variegated leaves? The leaves are fairly small, too. As it is a
small pic have you tried copying the image into a viewer and magnifying
it? It might help.
Guess I might have to do another trip in and get a decent photo or two!
There's Camellia sasanqua Variegata which seems a fair bet. I put your
photo into Image Well but couldn't make it very much clearer. But a
look at Trehane's site may help. It's in the left hand column, right at
the bottom.
http://www.trehane.co.uk/camellia_sasanqua_s/1826.htm And
it's entirely possible that a sasanqua would be flowering now.
--
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.com
South Devon
www.helpforheroes.org.uk