Supplement VII (2007) to
International register of heather names
Registered cultivars.
Calluna vulgaris
‘Amla’
Reg. no. C.2006:02: registered on
2 January 2006 by Torgny Karlsson, Glimakra, Sweden.
Corolla heliotrope (H12); flowers on rust-red pedicels, single,
August–mid-September; foliage lime-green with more yellow tips, turning
bronze-yellow in Autumn. Habit low, dense, spreading; 20cm tall, 50cm broad
after 5 years because each shoot (even flowering ones) curves downwards; it
does not need pruning. Very hardy.
Chance seedling found in a
pot containing a “big ‘Arran Gold’ ... used as a mother plant to take cuttings
from”; found at Glimakra, about 2000.
Established
here.
‘Bright Velvet’
Reg. no. C.2006:05: registered on
29 October 2006 by Albert Bosch, Westerlee, Netherlands.
Flowers white; foliage pure grey, without a trace of green; habit
erect.
Sport on ‘Velvet
Fascination’, found by Albert Bosch in 1994 on nursery.
Ericultura
143: 9 (2006).
‘Copper Splendour’
Reg. no. C.2006:06: registered on
29 October 2006 by Albert Bosch, Westerlee, Netherlands.
Flowers mauve (H2); foliage scaly (makes one think of a conifer),
orange-yellow in Summer, deepening to red-copper in Winter with orange foliage
in heart of plant; habit strongly erect with stiff branches.
Sport on ‘Manitoba’, found
by Albert Bosch in 1999 on nursery.
Ericultura
143: 9 (2006).
‘Haalboom’s Red’
Reg. no. C.2006:04: registered on
11 September 2006 by Firma W. Haalboom en Zn, Driebergen, Netherlands.
Corolla helder rood (zoals ‘Dark Beauty’); August–September; foliage
groen / frisgroen; habit breed opgaand. “Het is een mooie, gezonde cultivar met
opvallende bloemkleur en rijkbloeiend”.
Deliberately bred, about
2003, by H. Hoekert, kwekerij Hoekert BV Oldebroek; selected and named by Henk
Haalboom.
Ericultura
143: 10 (2006).
‘Milky Way’
Reg. no. C.2006:07: registered on
29 October 2006 by Albert Bosch, Westerlee, Netherlands.
Flowers white; foliage light
green, new growth white that lasts a long time; habit compact, erect.
Sport
on ‘Poolster’, found by Albert Bosch in 1998 at nursery.
Ericultura
143: 10 (2006).
‘Oregon Glow’
Reg. no. C.2006:03: registered on
1 March 2006 by Ella May T. Wulff, Oregon Heather Society, USA.
Flower ruby; foliage dark green; habit vigorous, upright. Differs
from other cultivars in its much-branched, long inflorescence and striking deep
colour.
Chance seedling in patch
of naturalized Calluna, at Yachats, Oregon, USA, found and selected by
Ella May T. Wulff in 2001.
Established
here. Heather news quarterly 30 (1): 2 [name ony] (2007).
‘Rosita’
Reg. no. C.2006:01: registered on 23 January 2006
byKurt Kramer, Edewecht, Germany.
Knospenblüher,
dunkelrosa, August-Dezember; foliage hellgrün; habit aufrecht. “Die Knospen
sind wesentlich dunkler als bei ‘Pink Alicia’.”
Sport on ‘Alicia’, found
by Kai Müssig (Miltenberg, Germany) on 4 October 2002 in Miltenberg; CLL 299
submitted for plant breeders’ rights, 6 September 2004, to to Bundessortenamt
Hannover.
Established
here.
Daboecia
D. cantabrica ‘Barneveld’s
Glorie’
Reg. no. D.2006:01. registered on
20 March 2006 by G. van Hoef, Barneveld, The Netherlands.
Flowers single; corolla Purple Violet 81A; calyx Greyed Purple 184B; July–October; foliage “zomer:
geel-groen 153A; winter: bruin rode verkleuring 178A”; habit “Breed opgaand”.
“Bijzonder het gele loof in contrast met de donkere bloem. Speciaal het jonge loof
is geel met bronskleurige groeitoppen.”
Chance seedling; found in
July 2002 by G. van Hoef; “als zaailing in een pot met D. × scotica ‘Bearsden’.”
Ericultura
143: 10 (2006).
Erica
‘May Queen Ina’
Reg. no. E.2006:03: registered on
11 June 2006 by Satoshi Miwa, Japan.
Corolla 20mm long, <6mm diameter, hairy,
rose pink (H7); lobes darker spreading; calyx dark green (N134A-RHSCC), <4mm
long; very floriferous; foliage dark green (N134A-RHSCC); habit upright,
forming a well-branched shrub.
Around 2000, some staff of a plant trading company
brought a single plant from USA, and the plant was brought to Tsuyoshi
Kinoshita through some other persons. It has been marketed in Japan as
pot-flower in recent years (since 2002) under the name Erica ventricosa “grandiflora”;
it is not E. ventricosa, flowers larger, corolla not glabrous.
Engei
Nyusu Reta no. 53: 28-29 (photograph on back cover) (2006).
E. carnea ‘Rubens’ Palette’
Reg. no. E.2006:08: registered on
29 October 2006 by Albert Bosch, Westerlee, Netherlands.
Flowers single, magenta (H14), bigger than normal; foliage dark
green, bronze-green in Winter; habit compact, broad spreading with upstanding
branchlets.
Origin not known; found by
Albert Bosch about 1985 at nursery as a single plant in a batch of plants,
bought elsewhere, without a name.
Ericultura
143: 11 (2006).
E. × darleyensis ‘Golden
Perfect‘
Reg. no. E.2006:09: registered on
29 October 2006 by Albert Bosch, Westerlee, Netherlands.
Flower white; calyx green; foliage pure yellow, yellow-green in
Winter,does not burn in sun; habit broad, spreading, more compact than most E.
× darleyensis
Sport on ‘White Perfection’, found by
Albert Bosch in 1995 at nursery.
Ericultura
143: 11 (2006).
E. × darleyensis ‘Stieneke’
Reg. no. E.2006:05: registered on
17 September 2006 by Fa. W. Haalboom en Zn, Driebergen, Netherlands.
Corolla wijnrood (H 14); foliage “heldergeel in zomer, oranjegeel tot
oranjerood in winter”; habit “breed spreidend”.”Het is een zeer gezonde,
rijhbloeiende plant met geel loof.”
Sport from ‘Kramer’s
Rote’, found by H. Haalboom sr in 1997 at Kwekerij Fa. W. Haalboom en Zn,
Driebergen.
Ericultura
143: 11 (2006).
E. × darleyensis ‘Winter
Surprise’
Reg. no. E.2005:08: registered on
31 December 2005 by Kurt Kramer, Edewecht, Germany.
Corolla & calyx rosa; November–April; foliage dunkelgrün; habit
breit-aufrecht. “Blüht früher und hat größere Blüten als ‘Spring Surprise’.”
Sport on ‘Spring
Surprise’, found by Johannes van Leuven (Geldern, Germany), in November 2004.
Clone ER190 submitted for plant breeder’s rights on 29 August 2005 to
Bundessortenamt Hannover.
Established
here.
E. × garforthensis ‘Craig’
Reg. no. E.2006:04: registered on
18 August 2006 by Dr John Griffiths, Garforth, Yorkshire.
After hard pruning, a compact, grey-green shrub, about 1m tall; new
growths brighter green than mature foliage; corolla pink (H8); not
free-flowering.
The “original” (only
surviving) clone of the batch of seedlings raised in 1983, the progeny of E.
tetralix ‘Bartinney’ × E. manipuliflora ‘Aldeburgh’.
Named
after Dr & Mrs Griffiths’s first grandson, Craig Simpson.
Established
here.
E. multiflora ‘John Tucker’
Reg. no. E.2006:06: registered on
1 October 2006 by The Registrar, The Heather Society.
Upright shrub, 0.5(–1)m tall; foliage glossy, dark green; flowers in
3s in leaf axils; corolla white, narrow-urceolate, to 4.5mm long, c.
2.5mm diameter (c. 1.5mm at throat); anthers dark brown, exserted a
little; calyx and pedicel white; February–May.
Seedling raised probably
in the late 1980s or early 1990s by John R. Tucker (d. July 2006) (Worthing,
Sussex); subsequently propagated vegetatively. The origin of the seed is
uncertain: it was said to have come from South Africa, which is highly
improbable. The plant was originally labelled “Erica longifolium”, but
subsequently identified as E. multiflora.
Established
here.
E. x veitchii ‘Westbourne
Grove’
Reg. no. E.2006:02: registered on
20 April 2006 by Allen Hall, Loughborough.
Shrub, very floriferous; flowers small, campanulate, pink in bud,
white later, style does not protrude; pollen infertile.
Chance seedling of unknown
origin; purchased c. 1980 from a nursery in Westbourne Grove, Bayswater, under
the name E. arborea ‘Alpina’.
Established
here (see p. ii (frontispiece)).
E. × watsonii ‘Claire Elise’
Reg. no. E.2006:07: registered on
3 October 2006 by Dr John Griffiths, Garforth, Yorkshire.
Flowers deep magenta-pink (amethyst H1[—H12]), in short racemes;
foliage dark green, hirsute, cilia glandular; leaves in whorls of 3 or 4 or
spirally arranged, pubescent when young, becoming almost glabrous; shoots with
golden tips in Spring; stems hirsute with long, gland-tipped hairs, and dense,
short hairs; internodes beneath racemes increase in length upwards; habit
compact to 15cm tall, spread to 40cm across.
Selected seedling from
deliberate cross of E. ciliaris ‘Corfe Castle’ × E. tetralix ‘Con
Underwood, made on 1 August 1982; first flowered in 1987; bred and selected by
Dr John Griffiths.
Named after Claire Elise Simpson (née Griffiths),
daughter to Dr & Mrs Griffiths.
Established
here.
Other names (not
registered) new to the International register of heather names
Calluna vulgaris
Abigail: trade designation employed in
2004 by Better by Nature Plants when marketing bud-blooming Calluna in
USA. (Described as an “Exclusive New Variet[y] for 2005. ... our Callunas are
evergreen perennials with exceptional ‘Better by Nature’ bud blooming
qualities. ... All plants are currently registered [sic] or Plant Patent
applied for (PPAF).” The plants were all effectively re-named, given trade
designations contrary to the ICNCP.
‘Amethysta’: Eigenzüchtung Krebs
(Heidböhl-Baumschule Jürgen Krebs, Hoyerhagen, Germany).
‘Anastasia’: CLL 281; submitted for plant breeders’
rights in Germany on 16 August 2004 by Eden’s Creations B.V (Oldebroek,
Netherlands).
‘Blanca’: CLL 342; submitted by Peter Herzog
(Westerstede, Germany) for plant breeders’ rights in Germany..
‘bunte Silver Cloud’: Sport aus ‘Silver Cloud’
...”; Eigenzüchtung Krebs (Heidböhl-Baumschule Jürgen Krebs, Hoyerhagen, Germany).
‘CKRED 4’: CLL 301; submitted by Karl Bückers
(Goch-Nierswalde, Germany) for plant breeders’ rights.
‘CKWHI 1’: CLL 251; submitted by Karl Bückers
(Goch-Nierswalde, Germany) for plant breeders’ rights.
‘CKWHI 2’: CLL 254; submitted by Karl Bückers
(Goch-Nierswalde, Germany) for plant breeders’ rights.
Dark Pink Alicia: trade designation; this name is
being widely used, despite being rejected; cf ‘Dapiali’.
‘Dina’: CLL 343; submitted by Peter Herzog
(Westerstede, Germany) for plant breeders’ rights.
Emily: trade
designation employed in 2004 by Better by Nature Plants in USA (cf Abigail).
‘Freckles’: Eigenzüchtung Krebs
(Heidböhl-Baumschule Jürgen Krebs, Hoyerhagen, Germany), 2004.
‘Gelb-Grün-Weiß’: Eigenzüchtung Krebs
(Heidböhl-Baumschule Jürgen Krebs, Hoyerhagen, Germany).
‘Gent’: CLL 294; submitted for plant breeders
rights to Bundessortenamt, by Lieven de Wade (Oostakker, Belgium); granted 12
April 2006. The name had previously been applied to CLL 231.
Hailey: trade
designation employed in 2004 by Better by Nature Plants in USA (cf Abigail).
Hannah: trade
designation employed in 2004 by Better by Nature Plants in USA (cf Abigail).
‘Heidböhl’:
rejected because it contains the vernacular name of the genus
“heide”: “Mutation aus ‘Dark Beauty’”; Eigenzüchtung Krebs (Heidböhl-Baumschule
Jürgen Krebs, Hoyerhagen, Germany); listed as new in 2006.
‘Ines Jacke’: CLL 250; submitted for plant
breeders’ rights in Germany on 2 September 2003
by Ernst Jacke (Elsdorf, Germany); name changed during trial.
Isabella: trade
designation employed in 2004 by Better by Nature Plants in USA (cf Abigail).
‘Justin’: CLL 304; submitted for plant breeders’
rights in Germany on 10 November 2004 by
Herrn Reiner Ooster (Wardenburg, Germany).
Kaitlyn: trade
designation employed in 2004 by Better by Nature Plants in USA (cf Abigail).
Kapels
Gelbe: trade
designation for ‘Dart’s Parrot’.
Kaylee: trade
designation employed in 2004 by Better by Nature Plants in USA (cf Abigail).
Madison: trade
designation employed in 2004 by Better by Nature Plants in USA (cf Abigail).
‘Moon Garden’: Eigenzüchtung Krebs
(Heidböhl-Baumschule Jürgen Krebs, Hoyerhagen, Germany); listed as new in 2006.
‘November Red’: rejected; listed by Jurgen
Krebs (Heidböhl-Baumschule Jürgen Krebs, Hoyerhagen, Germany) in 2006 as a
synonym for ‘Perestroika’ [sic].
Olivia: trade
designation employed in 2004 by Better by Nature Plants in USA (cf Abigail).
‘Petronella’: CLL 210; submitted by Firma Rainer de
Winkel & Sohn GbR (Gartenbau) (Goch, Germany).
‘Pink Marlies’: listed as available from
JacekWolski (Konstantynów Lódzki, Poland). The same name, as “pink Marlies”, is
apparently listed as a “synonym” for ‘Marleen’.on
http://www.robertmayer.de/html/fs_start.html.
‘Red Beauty’: rejected: CLL 302; submitted
by Franz Maassen und Gerd Canders (Straelen, Germany) for plant breeders’
rights.
‘Red Lips’: listed as “new” by Jurgen Krebs
(Heidböhl-Baumschule Jürgen Krebs, Hoyerhagen, Germany) in 2006 but not claimed
as his own raising.
‘Rosa Bella’: rejected: “Sport aus
‘Marlies’”; Eigenzüchtung Krebs (Heidböhl-Baumschule Jürgen Krebs, Hoyerhagen,
Germany).
‘Soraja’: CLL 283; submitted for plant breeders’
rights in Germany on 16 August 2004 by Eden’s Creations B.V. (Oldebroek,
Netherlands); name changed whilst still on test to ‘Sylke’.
‘Tom’: CLL 319; submitted by Reiner Ooster
(Wardenburg, Germany) for plant breeders’ rights, 1 September 2005.
‘Tschernobyl’: error for
‘Chernobyl’.
UO White: trade designation employed in
2004 by Better by Nature Plants in USA (cf Abigail).
Daboecia
D. cantabrica
‘Roter Sämling’: listed in 2006 by
Heidböhl-Baumschule Jürgen Krebs (Hoyerhagen, Germany).
Erica
E. carnea
— ‘Heideglut’:
rejected because it contains the vernacular name of the genus “heide”:
“Mutation an ‘Myretoun Ruby’ von H. Thieleke gefunden”; Jürgen Krebs
(Heidböhl-Baumschule Jürgen Krebs,
Hoyerhagen, Germany) listed it as new in 2006.
— ‘Kati’: “Mutation an ‘Madame
Seedling’ von H. Thieleke gefunden”; Jürgen Krebs (Heidböhl-Baumschule
Jürgen Krebs, Hoyerhagen, Germany):
listed this as new in 2006.
— ‘Roter
Sämling’: listed by Jürgen Krebs (Heidböhl-Baumschule Jürgen Krebs, Hoyerhagen,
Germany) in 2006 as new, but not
claimed as his own plant.
E. cinerea
— ‘Eiddler’s Gold’: typographic error for ‘Fiddler’s
Gold’. Haslo Ogrodnicze 4/2005.
E. gracilis
— ‘Bayernblut’:
“kwiaty czerwonorózowe, krzewinki duze i szerokie, kwitnienie obfite.” Haslo
Ogrodnicze 4/2005.
— ‘Globularis’:
rejected because it is a Latin word: “najwazniejsza odmiana we Francji,
kwiaty ma mniejsze niz inne odmiany, lecz bardzo liczne, moga byc rózowe,
lososiowe lub miedzianoczerwone, rozwijaja sie pózno, lecz dlugo.” Haslo Ogrodnicze 4/2005.
— ‘Typ
Schmidbauer’: “kwiaty
ciemnoczerwone i duze.” Haslo Ogrodnicze 4/2005.
— ‘Weisse Perle’: “Pierwsza odmiana klonalna ‘Weisse Perle’ pojawila sie okolo 1900 roku w okolicach Lipska w Niemczech.” Haslo Ogrodnicze 4/2005.