Gardeners, plant collectors, horticulturists, and landscape designers will find a valuable resource in this carefully selected plant directory of best performing winter-flowering shrubs. Readers will find daphnes, viburnums, witch hazels, and camellias to suit every taste and garden situation, as well as information about how to help their choice winter-flowering shrubs flourish from November to March. Tips on combining winter-flowering shrubs, using winter sunlight to backlight choice specimens, and getting the right balance of complementary plants complete this practical and inspiring guide. Whether looking to extend a plant collection or create a winter garden, collectors and gardeners alike will delight in the possibilities available for blooms and scents in colder climates.
"Charles Maries, a British plant explorer who was employed by James Veitch & Sons,
Chelsea, London, introduced Hamamelis mollis to cultivation in 1879. He had studied
botany under the tutorship of Professor G. Henslow and then for seven years worked
for his brother, R. Maries, at his nursery in Lytham, Lancashire. This background
meant he was familiar with both Japanese and Chinese plants when he joined the
firm of Veitch & Sons, in 1877. Because of this knowledge of Asian plants,
Maries was sent to collect interesting plants on behalf of the firm.
He left England in February 1877 for Shanghai, and from there he explored the
mountains near Ning po, where Robert Fortune collected. Maries then left for
Japan, where he collected many rare plants before returning to China in 1878.
In the spring of that year he went to Chin-kiang and Kiu-kiang, where he found
Hamamelis mollis in the Lushan Mountains. Maries did not record the precise locality
where he collected seed; however, the Veitch Nursery indicated it came from Kiang-su.
Maries certainly saw many plants here in flower in the spring, but when returning
in the autumn he found most of the vegetation had been cut down, presumably for
firewood. He did collect some seed, as in 1879 seed was received by the Veitch
Nursery. This was immediately sown but only one plant survived to maturity, in
the Coombe Wood Nursery.
This plant was not recognized as Hamamelis mollis for twenty years, when George
Nicholson, curator of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, visited the nursery and
recognized it as something different from H. japonica, of which the nursery had
thought it to be a form. Nicholson realized it was something different because
of an herbarium specimen that Augustine Henry had sent to the botanist Daniel
Oliver at Kew, who had named it as a new species, H. mollis, publishing a description
in the 1888 issue of Hooker's Icones Plantarum. Nicholson brought the plant to
the attention of George Harrow, foreman at the Coombe Wood Nursery, who then
grafted as many plants as he could from the original plant. This clone is now
known as H. mollis 'Coombe Wood' and was awarded a First Class Certificate by
the Royal Horticultural Society in 1918 and an Award of Garden Merit in 1922.
Later both Augustine Henry and E. H. Wilson found Hamamelis mollis in the woods
and thickets of Hupeh (now Hubei), thereby extending its known range into west-central
China. In 1902 Henry sent seed to Kew, who distributed some to other botanic
gardens in Europe. Wilson in Plantae Wilsonianae (Sargent 1913) described it
as one of the commonest shrubs in western Hupeh, occurring between 1300 and 2500
m elevation. He found it equally abundant on the Lushan Mountains near Kiukiang,
where Maries first found it, noting that it flowered in late March and early
April.
Hamamelis mollis introductions to the Arnold Arboretum by E. H. Wilson are reasonably
well recorded. The first (under accession number 14691) was seed collected in
Hsingshan Hsien in Hupeh Province received at the arboretum on 28 February 1908.
The second (accession number 14692) was also of seed but from an unspecified
location; this accession was also received at the arboretum in 1908, but the
exact date is not given. Between 1914 and 1946, seed, plants, and graft wood
was distributed from the Arnold Arboretum to just over 200 individuals and nurseries.
Today, according to Flora Republica Popularis Sinicae (Chang and Yan 1979), the
distribution covers a large area in the provinces of Sichuan, Hubei, Anhui, Zhejiang,
Jiangxi, Hunan, and Guangxi. Hamamelis mollis is often found in secondary forests
or thickets at elevations of 800–1400 m. For such a large distribution,
it must be fairly local within its range, as few Western botanists and plant
collectors have come across it in the wild in recent times. In a letter I received
from Professor Gu Yin of the Nanjing Botanical Garden, she stated that the distribution
of Hamamelis mollis is scattered in seven provinces in south-eastern and south-western
China. She also stated that significant variations have not yet been found in
the wild. This is not borne out, however, by the number of distinct named selections
from the early collections and from Japan.
Recent collections and introductions have been made by Mikinori Ogisu, who collected
some seedlings under his collection number Ogisu 98037 on 4 June 1998 from Wufeng,
south-west Hubei, at an elevation of about 1320 m; several plants are now established
in cultivation. The plants were growing as understory shubs on wooded slopes
in association with Acer davidii, Corylopsis willmottiae, Cornus japonica var.
chinensis, Weigela japonica var. sinica, and a Carpinus species. On 25 April
1999 he observed Hamamelis mollis in flower at Wugang, southern Hunan, at an
elevation of about 1350 m; on this occasion they were growing in company with
Quercus serrata, Corylopsis sinensis, Castanea seguinii, W. japonica var. sinica,
Rhododendron simsii, Hosta ventricosa, and a Lindera species. He reported that
all that were flowering were yellow, not showing much variation in depth of colour.
There was, however, a fair amount of variation in flower size, some being quite
small, and some individuals were less floriferous than others.
This bears out my initial observations on my own plants, raised from seed obtained
from Lushan Botanic Garden, Jiangxi Province, and collected locally. These are
showing minor variations in foliage characteristics, but as yet there have not
been sufficient flowers for detailed assessment to be made. With the degree of
variation in the named cultivars described in this chapter, I am sure that a
species with such a wide but local distribution must have interesting forms waiting
to be discovered.
In an autumn 1991 letter, Dr. Guo Cheng-ze of the Nanyue Arboretum, Hengyang,
Hunan, informed me that they had collected seed from a Hamamelis mollis plant,
at least fifty years old and growing as a solitary specimen at an elevation of
900 m in Hengshan. He went on to say that it is a rare plant in the locality.
From 4 September to 11 October 1994, an American expedition with representatives
from the Morris Arboretum, U.S. National Arboretum, Arnold Arboretum, and Longwood
Gardens, together with botanists from Nanjing Botanical Garden, botanized and
collected in the Wundang Shan region of north-western Hubei. They discovered
H. mollis (many plants) growing on a dry shady hillside; most were without seed,
but a few had fruited, and seed was collected."
Gardeners, plant collectors, horticulturists, and landscape designers will find a valuable resource in this carefully selected plant directory of the best performing winter-flowering shrubs. Find daphnes, viburnums, witch hazels, and camellias to suit every taste and garden situation, as well as information about how to help choice winter-flowering shrubs flourish from November to March. Tips on combining winter-flowering shrubs, using winter sunlight to backlight choice specimens, and getting the right balance of complementary plants complete this practical and inspiring guide. Whether looking to extend a plant collection or create a winter garden, collectors and gardeners alike will delight in the possibilities available for blooms and scents in colder climates.
"This would make a wonderful gift book for any gardener with
the winter blues."
—Marianne Binetti, Seattle Post-Intelligencer,
January 19, 2006
"Every garden can benefit from the element of surprise provided by the plants described here."
–Rob Cassy, The Bookseller, Fall 2005
"The sweet smell of daphnes and witch hazels nearly drifts off the pages ... this book reminds us how lucky we are to garden in a climate where we can have some plant or another in bloom every day of the year."
—Valerie Easton, Seattle Times, September 16, 2005
"Buffin possesses an intimate knowledge of the surprisingly subtle yet magical displays that characterize gardens in wintertime. The cultivation tips accompanying entries will inspire, inform, and prepare gardeners looking for exceptional specimens to incorporate all-year-round interest."
—Alice Joyce, Booklist, September 1, 2005
Michael W. Buffin presently advises on 70 historical Gardens and Parks in Southern England for the National Trust. He spent several years as Curator of Living Collections at The Sir Harold Hillier Gardens in Hampshire where he designed the planting for the Winter Garden. He trained at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh and spent time at the Morris Arboretum of the University of Pennsylvania. He has written many articles for plant journals, contributed sections to books, and lectured in the U.K. and U.S.A. He lives in Hampshire, England, with his wife and two children.
Publisher: Timber Press
Distributor: Barnes and Noble
Publication Date: 09-01-2005
Pages: 232
Measurements: 10.375in X 7.375in