Magnolia time

Blue skies and space to let magnolias grow to their potential certainly helps the display

We are currently at peak magnolia and this year has been a relief. Flowering in the past two years has been – dare I say it – pretty damn disappointing. Very wet springs saw blooms weather-mark badly, infected by some form of blight, and turn to droopy brown slush. They were not inspiring at all and I was beginning to wonder if one effect of climate change might be to take out the impressive splendour of our flagship plant family. This year they are magnificent after a bit of a stuttering start. Mind you, we have been blessed with perfect conditions – clear, calm and dry with only the occasional storm or downpour.

June 13, which is very early for us. The display this year never actually improved on this although more snow fell.

The season started unusually early. The first flowers on M. campbellii var campbellii opened at the end of May before the leaves had even fallen and winter was upon us. Every year I like to get out and photograph our tree against the maunga, Mount Taranaki, and the first photo of that was on July 6, before the mountain even had its full cover of snow. Similarly, ‘Vulcan’, ‘Burgundy Star’ and M. campbellii var mollicomata ‘Lanarth’ all opened their first blooms in early June and early July which is mid-winter here. Interestingly, that early start proved to be a false start on all four of them. They never really recovered from it to give us their usual mass display of splendour. Some are limping on, still with flowers, but the overall display from them has not had the usual breathtaking oomph. There are always some disappointments and this is the first year I can remember when those varieties have been rather ho-hum. We are concluding that an early start can in fact be a problem more than a promise.

Magnolia ‘Felix Jury’ on the left with white ‘Manchu Fan’
Magnolia ‘Felix Jury’.

The main flowering on  the rest has more than made up for the disappointing. Day after day of blue skies have delivered us perfect blooms with none of the previous problems of blight turning petals to mush. We know it is a good season because Felix’s Magnolia ‘Atlas’ is looking splendid. When we first released it, Mark described it as being like a giant pink cabbage and one of the largest magnolia flowers in the world at the time. It is the only one of ours that seems to perform better overseas than here. Year after year, I have struggled to get good photos of unblemished blooms because it does not like our spring storms but this year, this year it is perfect.

Magnolia ‘Atlas’
Magnolia nitida, for those of you who like to see something different

We have many magnolias. I have no idea how many. We also have space so we can allow trees to grow to the size they wish. Some of our magnolias are species and some are named cultivars from other breeders but the vast majority of our plants are seedlings from the breeding programme and there are literally hundreds of those. While we have only ever named twelve Jury magnolias (eight from Felix, four from Mark and another four of Mark’s are in the pipeline for release), they are the pick from several thousand seedlings. The majority end up getting chainsawed out as being of insufficient merit to retain but some are very good. They don’t meet our stringent criteria for releasing a new plant but they are good enough to keep across the property.

Just an unnamed seedling but looking very pretty this week

Finally, I saw a death notice recently for writer, gardener and magnolia lover, the inimitable Biddy Barrett. We have always referred to this pretty pink seedling as ‘Biddy’s Pink’ as she was adamant it should be selected for release. Mark didn’t agree so it remains a one-off plant but R.I.P Biddy. Your pink lives on.

Biddy’s Pink – a reference name only. This one has never been named and released.
Biddy’s Pink – pinker than Iolanthe but otherwise very similar
Mark’s Magnolia ‘Honey Tulip’
Felix’s ‘Milky Way’
And a purple seedling to cover the current range of colours in deciduous magnolias

4 thoughts on “Magnolia time

  1. Tim Dutton's avatarTim Dutton

    I’m glad you are getting a good year again after a few poor ones, because they are so spectacular when in full flower. Our Magnolia stellata ‘Rosea’ opened its first flower on 8 June here this year, before the leaves had all fallen. It used to not flower until August, but has been getting progressively earlier over the last few years. Mind you, it does have the longest flowering season by far and is totally impervious to our frosts, which is just as well as it flowers all winter. As with your campbelii, that early start seems to have meant flowering this year has been steady, but not as good a display as it has been in the past.

    With our Jury Magnolias, Apollo started late this year due to the very cold August, so has only been out for a week, and Black Tulip started a little earlier. Felix Jury and Iolanthe have yet to open. Now we have gales to contend with, so petals and unopened buds are littering the ground, not held against a blue sky. Such is gardening.

    1. Abbie Jury's avatarAbbie Jury Post author

      Goodness, you ate quite a bit later than us. I was in New Plymouth last week and the flowering there was about two weeks ahead of us – all that tarseal and concrete lifts temperatures as well as being right on the coast. Little changes can make a big difference.

  2. Paul Walsh's avatarPaul Walsh

    This is the first year my Felix Jury has flowered. It is stunning! I can’t wait for it to mature. Very grateful to your family for the pleasure your work provides to so many people

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