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Rhododendron without petals
When I moved into my house 3 years ago I inherited an established garden
containing (amongst other things) a healthy Rhododendron approximately 3 foot high by 4 foot wide. The garden is sited on moderately heavy clay soil and is south facing. The Rododendron is in a sheltered spot in partial shade in the morning but gets a fair amount of sun in the afternoon. In early spring the plant produces numerous flowers. These consist of the sepals anthers and stamens but no petals are produced whatsoever. The fruits/seeds are developing at the moment and all appear quite normal. I know that the fruits are fertile as I now possess several baby Rhododendrons that have self seeded and exhibit the same petal-less appearance as their parent. The plant itself appears very healthy and is producing an abundance of new shoots at present. Is this lack of petals due to the variety of Rhododendron I own or is it caused either by disease or the conditions in which it grows ? Although I love my Rhododendron I am envious of all the Rhododendrons sporting flowers in other peoples gardens. Thanks in advance for your help. Helen |
#2
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Rhododendron without petals
On Sun, 6 Apr 2003 18:17:38 +0100, "Oryx"
wrote: When I moved into my house 3 years ago I inherited an established garden containing (amongst other things) a healthy Rhododendron approximately 3 foot high by 4 foot wide. The garden is sited on moderately heavy clay soil and is south facing. The Rododendron is in a sheltered spot in partial shade in the morning but gets a fair amount of sun in the afternoon. In early spring the plant produces numerous flowers. These consist of the sepals anthers and stamens but no petals are produced whatsoever. The fruits/seeds are developing at the moment and all appear quite normal. I know that the fruits are fertile as I now possess several baby Rhododendrons that have self seeded and exhibit the same petal-less appearance as their parent. The plant itself appears very healthy and is producing an abundance of new shoots at present. Is this lack of petals due to the variety of Rhododendron I own or is it caused either by disease or the conditions in which it grows ? Although I love my Rhododendron I am envious of all the Rhododendrons sporting flowers in other peoples gardens. Thanks in advance for your help. Helen Nowhere can I find a disease that gives the effects you describe. Plenty of information on failure to set flowers at all, and information on buds that set and then go brown and never open, due to fungus disease (bud blast), and loss of flowers due to damage by flower thrips (mainly in the US), and petal blight which turns petals into a brown mess and occurs mainly on azaleas, but nothing about petal-less flowers. I suppose it's remotely possible that the buds were damaged at some time over the winter, by frost or insect attack, but I wouldn't expect all the buds to be affected in the same way, let alone the seedlings, and your post implies it's a regular occurrence. I think you've got a rogue. Grub it out (and its offspring) and treat yourself to a well-behaved modern hybrid. Now's the time to make a choice, when they're all in flower. It might be wise not to plant it in exactly the same place though. -- Chris E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net |
#3
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Rhododendron without petals
On Sun, 6 Apr 2003 18:17:38 +0100, "Oryx" wrote: snip In early spring the plant producesnumerous flowers. These consist of the sepals anthers and stamens but no petals are produced whatsoever. snip Is this lack of petals due to the variety of Rhododendron I own or is it caused either by disease or the conditions in which it grows ? Chris Hogg wrote in message ... Nowhere can I find a disease that gives the effects you describe. Plenty of information on failure to set flowers at all, and information on buds that set and then go brown and never open, due to fungus disease (bud blast), and loss of flowers due to damage by flower thrips (mainly in the US), and petal blight which turns petals into a brown mess and occurs mainly on azaleas, but nothing about petal-less flowers. I suppose it's remotely possible that the buds were damaged at some time over the winter, by frost or insect attack, but I wouldn't expect all the buds to be affected in the same way, let alone the seedlings, and your post implies it's a regular occurrence. I think you've got a rogue. Grub it out (and its offspring) and treat yourself to a well-behaved modern hybrid. Now's the time to make a choice, when they're all in flower. It might be wise not to plant it in exactly the same place though. -- Chris E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net Thanks for your reply Chris. I am glad you have confirmed my thoughts that it isnt likely to be a disease. Trust me to have a rogue Rhododendron !! I find it interesting that the lack of petals doesnt seem to affect its reproducing power and you are right - it has never produced petals since I have inherited it. I agree that the right thing to do would be to replace it with a flowering one, however I am loath to get rid of a plant that seems to be thriving. Some hard decisions are called for I think, :-) Helen |
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