Hootmanodendron: Summer 2015 – Hot and Dry

August 27, 2015 Today’s discussion covers two topics although they are closely intertwined with one other. For the first portion, those of us in the Mediterranean climate of the Pacific NW have thoroughly enjoyed/ suffered through what people will either say was the greatest or worst summer ever. This depends of course on whether you […]

Read More

The Mendocino Coast Botanical Garden

I vividly remember my first visit to this special garden in Fort Bragg on the coast of northern California. I was still fairly new to rhododendrons and the RSBG and it was my first exposure to maddenias and many of the tender big-leafs growing outside without protection. With its year-round mild temperatures, this coastal garden […]

Read More

Final posting for 2012 China expedition

HOOTMANODENDRON November 12, 2012 We have just returned from a very successful seed and plant collecting expedition to China. Thanks to a great seed year, excellent timing and the fact that we covered a tremendous amount of territory in our three weeks of field work, we managed to find seed on a tremendous assortment of […]

Read More

Hootmanodendron: China 2012 – Leigongping Mtn

“Have just returned from Leigongping mountain where I enjoyed one of my finest days in China. On a crisp, clear day (following hard rain on the climb up the day before) we hiked through the best preserved deciduous forest I have ever witnessed in my 17 years in Asia. A remarkable assemblage of trees dominated […]

Read More

Hootmanodendron: China 2012- Xichang

Back in a big city tonight (Xichang in southern Sichuan) first shower in several days and with internet. I have enjoyed lifetime memories of hiking through forests of 20 ft. high R. bureavii and massive mountainsides of the big-leaf – Rhododendron rex, many with incredibly deep, almost chocolate-brown indumentum. some of the most spectacular scenery […]

Read More

Hootmanodendron: The case of the mysterious Gaultheria

One of the primary non-rhododendron collections that we focus upon and feature in the RSBG is the Gaultheria collection. The gaultherias or “wintergreens’ are a widespread group of plants related to rhododendrons. They are called wintergreen because the species native in eastern North America, Gaultheria procumbens, was one of the few evergreens found growing in […]

Read More

Hootmanodendron: First time R. crenulatum blooms!

First Time Blooms! Steve Hootman After several years of patiently waiting, our oldest and largest specimen of the enigmatic Rhododendron crenulatum, a very rare member of Subsection Maddenia, has finally flowered. While we were all a bit underwhelmed by the slightly less than one-inch-long cream flowers with golden spots, we were very excited to finally […]

Read More

Hootmanodendron: August update

Since my last blog in March of 2009, a great deal has taken place within the fenced-in confines of the 24-acre Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden. If you are a member of our organization, you have some idea of what has been happening (and thus why it has taken me more than two years to get […]

Read More