| I am interested in trying to grow camellias from seed. I understand that you can get them to bloom sooner if you graft the seedling onto the rootstock of an older plant. Is that correct? I live in the Shenandoah Valley of Virignia (zone 6B). Do I have to use cold hardy varieties as root stock, or will I be ok as long as I plant the graft point below the soil surface? If cold hardiness is not an issue, can I use any variety as rootstock or do I need a special one?
Does anyone have camellia seedlings they would be interested in trading for something on my trade list?
Thanks for the help.
Ed |
Here is a link that might be useful: My trade list
Stuckinthedirt, You are correct that a seedling plant requires about five years to flower. I have a shortcut by approach grafting a five month-seedling to an understock. It will reduce one to two years to see the first flower. Camellia breeding takes time. Based on my obervation, open pollination seeds have only fair chance to become superior flower. Try control pollination to avoid wasting your time and resource. See the pictures for seedling graft. |
Here is a link that might be useful: http://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a182/wangjohn666/Untitled.jpg