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Rhododendron bracteatum Rehd. & Wils.

Modern name

Rhododendron bracteatum Rehder & E.H. Wilson

An evergreen shrub 3 to 6 ft high; young shoots not downy, bearing below the leaves proper linear ‘bracts’ (really depauperate leaves) 14 to 58 in. long, some of which persist to the second or even third year. Leaves oval with a tendency to ovate or oblong, rounded at the base, terminated by a short mucro, 34 to 2 in. long by about half as much wide; dark green and thinly-scaly above, paler and more scaly beneath; stalk 16 to 14 in. long. Flowers borne three to six in a cluster, the corolla about 1 in. wide, white, strongly blotched and dotted with deep wine red, bell-shaped at the base, the five lobes spread out widely; stamens ten, the lower half hairy; ovary very scaly; style almost or quite glabrous; calyx small, unequally lobed; flower-stalks 12 to 1 in. long. Bot. Mag., t. 9031. (s. Heliolepis)

Native of W. Szechwan, China; introduced in 1908 by Wilson. He and Rehder considered it to be most closely related to R. yanthinum (concinnum), while later authorities in classification associate it with R. oreotrephes, but to neither of them does it bear much resemblance in general appearance when in bloom. It is now placed in the Heliolepis series. The figure in the Botanical Magazine was made from a plant growing at Caerhays in Cornwall, where it flowers about mid-June. The crushed leaves have a curious odour resembling that of black currants; this, with the persistent ‘bracts’ mentioned above, make the species easily recognised. The flowers are not large but they are daintily pretty.


Genus

Rhododendron

Other species in the genus