- FARGESIA MURIELAE
- 7' height, Shade/sun, -20 degrees F Minimum, Clumper. Sinarundinaria murielae, Umbrella Bamboo, Arundinaria
murielae, Thamnocalamus spathaceus. The most popular
& widely grown bamboo in the colder areas of
Europe & the British Isles. Uncommon in the
U.S. Likes to grow in cool, partly or entirely
shaded locations. Grows slowly in tropical
climates. The culms arch strongly under the
weight of many leaves. 1/2" maximum culm
diameter.
- Native to
mountainous areas of China at 10,000' above sea level,
where it is said to be the principal food of the giant
panda. Hilliers says "This beautiful
Bamboo, undoubtedly one of the best in cultivation,
was introduced from China in 1913 by Ernest Wilson,
after whose daughter, Muriel, it was subsequently
named."
- In August of
1984 botanist Tom Soderstorm told us he felt it should
be called a Sinarundinaria whereas Richard Haubrich
grouped it with Thamnocalamus. The Zhejiang
Forestry Institute in China published a journal in
1988 which states the plant was originally named
Fargesia in 1893 by the French botanist Franchet &
then goes on to define 76 species of the genus.
- A 2 gallon pot
was sold for $50 at the 1988 NCCABS auction. 1-5
gallon pots were sold at 1991 ABS sales for $25-50
each.
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- Tim Meier has a well-mulched plant that is evergreen down to -25 degrees F. This poor
bamboo-crazed
fellow seems to do nothing but monitor Bamboo
hardiness & must not have held a decent job in
years.
- Pryse Duerfeldt had a 3-year-old plant in
Negaunee, Michigan in 1992 which got -30 degrees every
winter & some below-freezing conditions every
month of the year.
- Richard Sturgill planted one
in Ketchikan, Alaska in March of 1992.
We don't how well it did.
- Al Adelman in
Westford, Mass reported that in winter of 2002 Fargesia murielae was
untouched by the lowest temp, which was about -8F with abundant snow cover.
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