Further Notes on the
Exbury Hybrid Azaleas in Virginia
Thomas Wheeldon, Richmond, Virginia
On a recent visit to Virginia, Mr. G. H. Pinckney, Managing Director of John Waterer Sons & Crisp, Ltd. of Bagshot, Surrey, England, said that all but a handful of American small azalea growers are missing out on one of the most spectacular shrubs this group has to offer. The remarkable plant comes from the new race of azalea novelties of the Exbury strain.
These hybrids produce flowers measuring four inches across in large trusses with amazing growth habits and configuration. The range of color is as wide as that found in a stunning sunset. The development of these azaleas was very considerably advanced by the late Mr. L. de Rothschild of Exbury Estate, who by crossing the best only of generations of seedlings, improved beyond all belief the color and size of flower. Some of the most recent hybrids of this famous strain have been on trial for several seasons and there are now available to us in America varieties which have been selected for outstanding color size of flower and vigor. Some of these varieties were shown at the Chelsea Flower Show in England in 1952 for the first time, and several have been selected by the Royal Horticultural Society for trial at their garden at Wisely, Surrey. These azaleas flower later than the general run of their kinfolk. Here in Virginia they flower during the last half of May. They remain in bloom for at least three weeks.
Since these large flowered azaleas trace their ancestry back to almost a dozen species and R. Calendulaceum, an Eastern American relative, is strongly represented, one is led to believe that the plants will be particularly adaptable to this region. The same may be said of the areas in which R. Occidentale is native, for undoubtedly R. Occidentale figures in the species from which this new race sprung. Fairly upright in habit, some of the Exbury hybrids, are a little tighter in growth than others. The shrubs will eventually become bushy, six to seven foot plants. It seems that these new azaleas should be better known and have a wider field of distribution. The reasons that they are not are as follows:
These hybrids require shelter from the sun in the summertime, liking filtered shade beneath trees or placement on the north side of a building. There is no question of winter hardiness; they can stand temperatures of well below zero. Like other ericaceous plants, the Exbury hybrid azaleas, must have an acid soil, rich in humus. It is advisable to mulch the plants well with peat moss, pine tags or other material.