- DENDROCALAMUS HAMILTONII

- Full Sun, 32 degrees F Minimum, Clumper.
-
First propagated in the U.S. by Don McKechnie in
Fresno. Don offered the first release at the fall
'91 SOCAL sale for $300 with no buyer. The SOCAL
reference collection contains a specimen. A 15
gallon pot was offered for $100 at the spring '94 SOCAL
auction but found no buyer. Richard Quiroz bought
one at the '94 ABS auction in San Francisco for $170.
An 8" pot 4' tall sold for $75 at the '95 SOCAL
fall sale. Two 8" pots sold for $100 at the fall SOCAL auction.
- Native to eastern
India, where it is used commercially to produce pulp
& paper. Big plant, 70-80' tall, 8" maximum diameter culms,
big leaves, almost as big as Beechyana but upright, like a
larger Oldhamii. The largest bamboo in Thailand,
where it is used for house posts, basketry & edible
shoots. Richard Neufeld saw D. hamiltonii plantations
60 miles long in Thailand in 1991. Jean Harrington in St Pete, Fl had
a 8' tall 1 year-old plant that was killed to the ground
by one night of 27 degrees in 1995. It later grew
back both leaves & canes from the base.