Chimonanthus
Chimonanthus is a genus of flowering plants in the family Calycanthaceae, native to China, but is also cultivated elsewhere in Asia, including Iran. The genus includes three to six species depending on taxonomic interpretation; six are accepted by the Flora of China. The name means winter flower in Greek.
Description
They are deciduous or evergreen shrubs growing to 2–13 m tall. The leaves are opposite, entire, 7–20 cm long and 3–7 cm broad. The flowers are 2–3 cm wide, with numerous spirally-arranged yellow or white tepals; they are strongly scented, and produced in late winter or early spring before the new leaves. The fruit is an elliptic dry capsule 3–4 cm long.Species
, Flora of China accepts the following species:- Chimonanthus campanulatus R.H. Chang & C.S. Ding
- Chimonanthus grammatus M.C. Liu
- Chimonanthus nitens Oliv.
- Chimonanthus praecox Link
- Chimonanthus salicifolius S.Y. Hu
- Chimonanthus zhejiangensis M.C. Liu
Cultivation and uses
In China Chimonanthus was domesticated during the Song dynasty and inspired courtly poems from the eleventh century; it flowers at the Chinese New Year, when flowering sprigs are used as hair ornaments. In China, prunings are dried and kept to perfume linen cupboards. The shrub was introduced to Japanese gardens from China in the early Edo period. Its introduction into European gardens, from Japan, is noted for England, 1766, when it was grown under glass for the sixth Earl of Coventry in the conservatory at Croome Court, Worcestershire. By 1799 that shrub had grown to be 16 feet high and 10 feet wide. By that time it had been tried out of doors without winter protection and proved hardy in the south of England. Slips of it were distributed among nurserymen and so it entered European horticulture. A larger-flowered variety, "grandiflorus" was grown by the comtesse de Vandes in Bayswater, London, before 1819. A yellow-flowered variety is also noted.
No notice has yet been found of Chimonanthus in an American colonial garden; it was first offered in an American catalogue in 1811. It is hardy at least to New York City, where frosts interrupt, but do not stop the flowering.
The flowers are said to be edible., and can be used to flavor tea.
At the end of its flowering, since it flowers most freely on ripened young wood and has little summer and autumn interest, it is thinned and pruned similarly to Forsythia by partly heading back and a few thick old stems removed at the ground.
Chimonanthus plants are frequently subject to attacks from aphids, and may be attacked by mites and leaf beetles.