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Vineyard Gardens

484 State Road
West Tisbury, MA, 02575
508.693.8511
Landscaping & Garden Center

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Vineyard Gardens

  • Home
  • ABOUT
  • LANDSCAPING
    • Landscaping
    • SPRING CHECKLIST 2025
    • LANDSCAPE DESIGN
    • LANDSCAPE CONSTRUCTION
    • LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE
  • NURSERY
    • Nursery
    • SALES & DISCOUNTS
    • BULK MATERIAL
  • Application
  • BLOG
  • Contact

CAMELLIAS

October 24, 2023 Karen Logan

CAMELLIAS

Broad leaf evergreens with showy flowers and shiny foliage. They are native to Eastern and Southern Asia.

Protect your Camellias, the deer will eat them!

******************

CAMELLIA JAPONICA

Camellia japonica is the species most available in the trade. It is cultivated for its beautiful flowers and it’s shiny leaves. There are over than 200 cultivars of C japonica. First seen in Europe in late 1800’s but originated in Asia hundreds of years earlier. They have a variety of flowers from singles to doubles to anemone flowered. C. japonica flowers in late winter into spring. They can get 6-8 ft tall here on Martha’s Vineyard. Polly Hill Arboretum in West Tisbury is a great place to see them when they are in bloom. C. japonica tend to have hardiness issues this far North so make sure to plant them in a protected spot. They are much more popular in the south where they grow much bigger.

The Ice Angel series are the hardiest of camellias we know.

  • “Winter Snowman” has a double white flowered bloom.

  • “April Remembered” has a soft pink bloom. It is a hardy Camellia developed and introduced at the University of North Carolina and Camellia Forest Nursery in Chapel Hill, NC. Growing Camellia’s on the Vineyard can be frustrating but when successful, very rewarding. There are many species and selections but most often grown are C. japonica and C. sasanqua. The plants themselves are reliably hardy outdoors but because they tend to flower in late winter/early spring the flowers are often burnt by freezing temperatures. This doesn’t seem to daunt those who desire their large, formally structured flowers. The plants can become large in time or easily kept trimmed to a neat, tight shrub.

care

*******

* Prefers soil rich

in organic matter

* Likes lots of water

yet well drained soil

* They are not

drought tolerant

* Must be protected

from deer

*Afternoon shade is best

Camellia japonica

plant

*******

* Plant against the

house or a stone wall to

offer some winter

protection

* Prefers a protected

spot because this

far north they are at the

marginsof their

hardiness zone.

******************

CAMELLIA SASANQUA

The flowers on the C. sasanqua’s tend to be smaller and less formal but are produced in abundance in the late autumn. This works in our favor here on the Island since we tend to have a long, languorous fall season. The sasanqua’s flowers also come in a range of colors from red through pink to white in singles and doubles and have the added advantage of being fragrant. Its not sweet or pungent its more a clean, fresh, woodsy scent that is delightful and unexpected.

Camellia Sasanqua

C. sasanqua

*******

Think ahead for

what your garden

will be like in the

Vineyard’s long,

mild autumn.

Camellia sasanqua

augment the fall garden

and make lovely, hardy

additions to it.

Camellia Sasanqua

******************

Camellia Sinensis

The tea we drink comes from the steeped and fermented leaves of C. sinensis. The preparations determines whether it is green or black tea. [We do not carry C sinensis but mention it only as a point of interest.]

In FALL PLANTS, OCTOBER Tags camellias, fall flowers, broad leaf evergreens, camillia japonica

484 State Rd. West Tisbury, MA 02575

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!

mon - sat 8am - 5pm // sun 9am - 3pm

(508) 693.8511