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In Bloom

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Erica canaliculata 1Erica canaliculata 2Erica canaliculata 3Erica canaliculata 4

Erica canaliculata 5Erica canaliculata 6Erica canaliculata 7Erica canaliculata 8

Erica canaliculata is located in the South Africa Garden (Beds 26b and 27g) and the Fragrance Garden (Bed 11a).

Erica canaliculata


Plant Profile
Scientific Name Erica canaliculata
Family Ericaceae
Plant Type Evergreen shrub
Environment Thrives in light, acid soils, moist winter conditions. Infrequent deep watering in summer months. Protect from prolonged exposure to frost. Full sun on the coast, partial shade inland.
Bloom Profuse bloom in winter. Flower color is deeper in plants grown outdoors in cooler conditions than in greenhouse grown plants.
Uses Ornamental used for winter color in perennial beds and borders, foundation plantings.
More Info The Heather Society's world of heaths and heathers

Christmas Heather at the Huntington Botanical Garden


Rock Spray Nursery specializes in heaths and heathers
Profile Contributor: Fred Bové

Erica canaliculata
"Christmas Heather", "Channeled Heath"

"Christmas Heather" is a profuse blooming shrub from South Africa. The dainty urn-shaped lavender flowers with tiny black stamens cover the shrub completely in winter. Its leaves are evergreen, and dense. Canaliculata means channeled in Latin, and refers to corrugated grooves on the inner woody bark. Christmas Heather can grow to 6 feet.

Ericas are heaths, not heathers; both are members of the Ericaceae family but are in separate genera. More than 600 varieties of heath grow in the Cape Province region of South Africa, an area of 100 square miles at the tip of the continent, and a botanical wonderland. Three fourths of the plants there are endemic, meaning they occur nowhere else in the world. 8,550 species have been counted, twice as many as in California, which is four times larger.

South Africa has a mediterranean climate of mild winters and dry summers with few climate extremes, making it possible for a great variety of plants to prosper. We enjoy similar conditions in the Bay Area, and as a result, San Francisco Botanical Garden contains a great diversity of plants from the Cape Province.



Contributors: Docents Joanne Taylor and Kathy McNeil


  • Bloom Archive 2008
  • Bloom Archive 2007
  • Bloom Archive 2006
Picea sitchensis

Picea sitchensis

January

Telanthophora grandifolia

Telanthophora grandifolia

February

Aeonium arboreum 'Schwartzkopf'

Aeonium arboreum 'Schwartzkopf'

March

Leptospermum Spp.

Leptospermum

April

Salvia gesneraeflora

Salvia gesneraeflora

May

Lavandula spp.

Lavandula spp.

June

Pelargonium

Pelargonium

July

Fuchsia paniculata

Fuchsia paniculata

August

Luma apiculata

Luma apiculata

September

Luculia

Luculia

October

Arbutus unedo

Arbutus unedo

November

 
Restionaceae

Restionaceae

January

Hellebores

Hellebores

February

Ceanothus

Ceanothus

March

Rhododendron

Rhododendron

April

Psoralea pinnata

Psoralea pinnata

May

Fremontodendron californicum

Fremontodendron californicum

June

Leucadendron argenteum

Leucadendron argenteum

July

Crocosmia

Crocosmia

August

Gunnera tinctoria

Gunnera tinctoria

September

Pellaea rotundifolia

Pellaea rotundifolia

October

Fuchsia boliviana

Fuchsia boliviana

November

Erica canaliculata

Erica canaliculata

December

Magnolia campbelli

Magnolia campbelli

January

Magnolia denudata

Magnolia denudata

February

Camellia

Camellia

March

Geranium maderense

Geranium maderense

April

Acmena smithii

Acmena smithii

May

Eschscholzia californica

Eschscholzia californica

June

Dendromecon harfordii

Dendromecon harfordii

July

Romneya coulteri

Romneya coulteri

August

Eupatorium purpureum

Eupatorium purpureum

September

Epilobium canum sp.

Epilobium canum sp.

October

Grevillea spp.

Grevillea spp.

November

Drimys winteri

Drimys winteri

December

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