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Stephen Wolstenholme 02-03-2010 11:26 AM

Camellia
 
After the cold winter our camellia has many more buds than usual.

It looks like the bad winter may result in much better budding.

Is this normal for camellia?

Steve

--
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Gopher 02-03-2010 01:26 PM

Camellia
 
In message , Stephen
Wolstenholme writes
After the cold winter our camellia has many more buds than usual.

It looks like the bad winter may result in much better budding.

Is this normal for camellia?

Steve

Although I am unsure whether it's normal or not our camellias are
certainly bud laden this year as are those in friends gardens. Let's
hope we don't get an ill timed late frost to blight the show. Last
couple of years our plum blossoms were blasted - only a handful of fruit
as opposed to the normal heavy crop.

Fingers crossed!
--
Gopher .... I know my place!

Stephen Wolstenholme 02-03-2010 03:53 PM

Camellia
 
On Tue, 2 Mar 2010 15:32:13 +0000, Sacha wrote:

On 2010-03-02 13:26:01 +0000, Gopher said:

In message , Stephen
Wolstenholme writes
After the cold winter our camellia has many more buds than usual.

It looks like the bad winter may result in much better budding.

Is this normal for camellia?

Steve

Although I am unsure whether it's normal or not our camellias are
certainly bud laden this year as are those in friends gardens. Let's
hope we don't get an ill timed late frost to blight the show. Last
couple of years our plum blossoms were blasted - only a handful of
fruit as opposed to the normal heavy crop.

Fingers crossed!


Fingers crossed indeed. Ours are also heavy with buds but is it the
cold - doubt it - or is it some other kind of stress they've been under?


Like what? Isn't cold a stress?

Steve

--
Neural Planner Software Ltd www.NPSL1.com

Neural network applications, help and support.

Pam Moore[_2_] 02-03-2010 04:45 PM

Camellia
 
On Tue, 02 Mar 2010 11:26:55 +0000, Stephen Wolstenholme
wrote:

After the cold winter our camellia has many more buds than usual.

It looks like the bad winter may result in much better budding.

Is this normal for camellia?

Steve


More likely to be the wet summer. Buds are formed then, not in
winter. Mine too has a mass of healthy buds.

Pam in Bristol

Dave Hill 02-03-2010 06:07 PM

Camellia
 
On 2 Mar, 16:45, Pam Moore wrote:
On Tue, 02 Mar 2010 11:26:55 +0000, Stephen Wolstenholme

wrote:
After the cold winter our camellia has many more buds than usual.


It looks like the bad winter may result in much better budding.


Is this normal for camellia?


Steve


More likely to be the wet summer. *Buds are formed then, not in
winter. *Mine too has a mass of healthy buds.

Pam in Bristol


I'm not sure about Camelias but the flower buds on a Rhododendron are
formed June/july of the preceding year, so if they dont get enough
water at that stage you dont get such good flowering the following
year, I would suspect the same is true for Camelias.
David Hill

Charlie Pridham[_2_] 03-03-2010 03:56 PM

Camellia
 
In article ,
says...
After the cold winter our camellia has many more buds than usual.

It looks like the bad winter may result in much better budding.

Is this normal for camellia?

Steve


Camellias need plenty of late summer sunshine (September/ October) to
initialize bud set, then a cold winter holds them back and you tend to
get a mass display
--
Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwall
www.roselandhouse.co.uk
Holders of national collections of Clematis viticella cultivars and
Lapageria rosea

Charlie Pridham[_2_] 03-03-2010 03:56 PM

Camellia
 
In article ,
says...
After the cold winter our camellia has many more buds than usual.

It looks like the bad winter may result in much better budding.

Is this normal for camellia?

Steve


Should have added a wet summer helps as well!!
--
Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwall
www.roselandhouse.co.uk
Holders of national collections of Clematis viticella cultivars and
Lapageria rosea


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