Camellias grown in humid, tropical conditions with a definite rainy season and a definite dry season. Keep a camellia watered well in a warm climate withhelpful tips from a sustainable gardener in this free video on growing flowers. Expert: Yolanda Vanveen Contact: www.vanveenbulbs.com Bio: Yolanda Vanveen is a third-generation flower grower and sustainable gardener who lives in Kalama, Wash. She is the owner of VanveenBulbs.com. Filmmaker: Daron Stetner
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7 Comments
jekico1978
on 5th Jun, 10 09:06pm
The misinformaion in this video is close to being complete. Nearly everything is incorrect.
jekico1978
on 5th Jun, 10 10:06pm
The misinformaion in this video is close to being complete. Nearly everything is incorrect.
FlowersINthedust1
on 5th Jun, 10 11:06pm
This is a Gardenia not a cameliia and few camellias have sent but Gardenias have .
debbieodom
on 5th Jun, 10 11:06pm
Also, only a few select few camellias have smell – she’s got her flowers mixed up.
debbieodom
on 6th Jun, 10 12:06am
All information in this video is false, the plant is a gardenia she’s holding – not a camellia. Camellias like cold weather, and will bloom in winter. She has her plants mixed up. They will overwinter in many many areas – and you CAN plant them in the sun.
Dreamline45056
on 6th Jun, 10 01:06am
My experience has been that camellias are hardy at least to zone 8, where temperatures regularly get below 60 degrees. I have seen them overwinter as far north as Ohio.
drinkingvinyl
on 6th Jun, 10 02:06am
This a gardenia plant, not a camellia