What is this small perfume-like flower and how can I grow cuttings?
What is this plant with little yellow flowers? The smell is immaculate, so strong, smelt from far away, yet soft and perfume like at the same time.
Plant grows maybe 2m tall.
How can I grow cuttings? Or will it grow seeds I can harvest more easily after the flowering season?
identification flowers cuttings
add a comment |
What is this plant with little yellow flowers? The smell is immaculate, so strong, smelt from far away, yet soft and perfume like at the same time.
Plant grows maybe 2m tall.
How can I grow cuttings? Or will it grow seeds I can harvest more easily after the flowering season?
identification flowers cuttings
add a comment |
What is this plant with little yellow flowers? The smell is immaculate, so strong, smelt from far away, yet soft and perfume like at the same time.
Plant grows maybe 2m tall.
How can I grow cuttings? Or will it grow seeds I can harvest more easily after the flowering season?
identification flowers cuttings
What is this plant with little yellow flowers? The smell is immaculate, so strong, smelt from far away, yet soft and perfume like at the same time.
Plant grows maybe 2m tall.
How can I grow cuttings? Or will it grow seeds I can harvest more easily after the flowering season?
identification flowers cuttings
identification flowers cuttings
asked Jan 6 at 8:10
Johan88Johan88
1118
1118
add a comment |
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
It's Osmanthus as already said in one of the other answers, specifically, Osmanthus fragrans, maybe the variety 'Conger' - there's a clear image of the flowers here https://m.dhgate.com/product/wholesale-tea-sweet-olive-osmanthus-fragrans/390370702.html#pd-019
Propagation can be done by collecting ripe seed, but they can take 6-18 months to germinate, so it's more usual to take semi ripe cuttings during early summer and use bottom heat to get them rooting, or almost ripe cuttings with a heel in autumn, placed in a cold frame. General information and propagation info here https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Osmanthus+fragrans
Thanks. You gave the propagation info so you get the green tick. Much appreciated
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 2:20
add a comment |
It looks like some type of Osmanthus to me. There are quite a few different species: O. heterophyllus, O. yunnanensis, O. fragrans (sweet olive), and many, many more! I think Home Depot's picture of their plant has the most resemblance to your photos:
Osmanthus can be gigantic trees or small shrubs, or can be trimmed to become hedges. Some bloom in the fall, and some in spring.
The reason I think of Osmanthus and not Pittosporum is the way the little flowers look, hiding amongst the leaves, and also the way you describe the fragrance, "... immaculate, so strong, smelt from far away, yet soft and perfume like at the same time."
The fact that you use the word "immaculate" sounds more like O. than Pittosporum which is so overpoweringly fragrant it can be cloying and unpleasant at close range. (my opinion, sorry)
Osmanthus does have a heavenly fragrance that for some reason can be very hard to pinpoint where it's coming from. Maybe because the flowers are so nondescript and "shy", you don't suspect (or even notice) them right away.
Thanks for the info ! Hopefully I can get some Spring Bloomers and some Autumn Bloomers to enjoy this great fragrance year round.
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 6:32
add a comment |
This is a Fragrant Tea Olive.
I got one from amazon couple months ago and it has bloomed couple times already in my house.
The Fragrant is exactly how you described it
Here is the link...Good Luck!
Fragrant Tea Olive on Amazon
add a comment |
Ok this one is tough; my choice is Pittosporum omeiense, native to China, fragrant, and the leaves look similar. My difficulty here is in finding references - the ITIS database does not recognize the species name even though it is pretty well scattered about over the Internet, and I don't have time to rake through all the possibilities. Hortus Third does not list it under that name, although it might be there under a synonym, reclassified into a different genus.
Colin Beckingham to the rescue again ! Thanks. I'll wait and see any other suggestions that pop up for this one. Just check P. Omeiense on Google image. Flowers seem to be 5 petalled and bell shaped whereas my flowers today look like they're 4 petalled and not bell shaped.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 14:16
See if you can find some fruits or seed capsules, that would help much. And would resolve the propagation issue.
– Colin Beckingham
Jan 6 at 14:28
Didn't notice any today. Will look next time I pass by but might not be for a while.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 15:17
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "269"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});
function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});
}
});
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fgardening.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f43053%2fwhat-is-this-small-perfume-like-flower-and-how-can-i-grow-cuttings%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
It's Osmanthus as already said in one of the other answers, specifically, Osmanthus fragrans, maybe the variety 'Conger' - there's a clear image of the flowers here https://m.dhgate.com/product/wholesale-tea-sweet-olive-osmanthus-fragrans/390370702.html#pd-019
Propagation can be done by collecting ripe seed, but they can take 6-18 months to germinate, so it's more usual to take semi ripe cuttings during early summer and use bottom heat to get them rooting, or almost ripe cuttings with a heel in autumn, placed in a cold frame. General information and propagation info here https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Osmanthus+fragrans
Thanks. You gave the propagation info so you get the green tick. Much appreciated
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 2:20
add a comment |
It's Osmanthus as already said in one of the other answers, specifically, Osmanthus fragrans, maybe the variety 'Conger' - there's a clear image of the flowers here https://m.dhgate.com/product/wholesale-tea-sweet-olive-osmanthus-fragrans/390370702.html#pd-019
Propagation can be done by collecting ripe seed, but they can take 6-18 months to germinate, so it's more usual to take semi ripe cuttings during early summer and use bottom heat to get them rooting, or almost ripe cuttings with a heel in autumn, placed in a cold frame. General information and propagation info here https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Osmanthus+fragrans
Thanks. You gave the propagation info so you get the green tick. Much appreciated
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 2:20
add a comment |
It's Osmanthus as already said in one of the other answers, specifically, Osmanthus fragrans, maybe the variety 'Conger' - there's a clear image of the flowers here https://m.dhgate.com/product/wholesale-tea-sweet-olive-osmanthus-fragrans/390370702.html#pd-019
Propagation can be done by collecting ripe seed, but they can take 6-18 months to germinate, so it's more usual to take semi ripe cuttings during early summer and use bottom heat to get them rooting, or almost ripe cuttings with a heel in autumn, placed in a cold frame. General information and propagation info here https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Osmanthus+fragrans
It's Osmanthus as already said in one of the other answers, specifically, Osmanthus fragrans, maybe the variety 'Conger' - there's a clear image of the flowers here https://m.dhgate.com/product/wholesale-tea-sweet-olive-osmanthus-fragrans/390370702.html#pd-019
Propagation can be done by collecting ripe seed, but they can take 6-18 months to germinate, so it's more usual to take semi ripe cuttings during early summer and use bottom heat to get them rooting, or almost ripe cuttings with a heel in autumn, placed in a cold frame. General information and propagation info here https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Osmanthus+fragrans
answered Jan 6 at 22:56
BambooBamboo
107k254142
107k254142
Thanks. You gave the propagation info so you get the green tick. Much appreciated
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 2:20
add a comment |
Thanks. You gave the propagation info so you get the green tick. Much appreciated
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 2:20
Thanks. You gave the propagation info so you get the green tick. Much appreciated
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 2:20
Thanks. You gave the propagation info so you get the green tick. Much appreciated
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 2:20
add a comment |
It looks like some type of Osmanthus to me. There are quite a few different species: O. heterophyllus, O. yunnanensis, O. fragrans (sweet olive), and many, many more! I think Home Depot's picture of their plant has the most resemblance to your photos:
Osmanthus can be gigantic trees or small shrubs, or can be trimmed to become hedges. Some bloom in the fall, and some in spring.
The reason I think of Osmanthus and not Pittosporum is the way the little flowers look, hiding amongst the leaves, and also the way you describe the fragrance, "... immaculate, so strong, smelt from far away, yet soft and perfume like at the same time."
The fact that you use the word "immaculate" sounds more like O. than Pittosporum which is so overpoweringly fragrant it can be cloying and unpleasant at close range. (my opinion, sorry)
Osmanthus does have a heavenly fragrance that for some reason can be very hard to pinpoint where it's coming from. Maybe because the flowers are so nondescript and "shy", you don't suspect (or even notice) them right away.
Thanks for the info ! Hopefully I can get some Spring Bloomers and some Autumn Bloomers to enjoy this great fragrance year round.
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 6:32
add a comment |
It looks like some type of Osmanthus to me. There are quite a few different species: O. heterophyllus, O. yunnanensis, O. fragrans (sweet olive), and many, many more! I think Home Depot's picture of their plant has the most resemblance to your photos:
Osmanthus can be gigantic trees or small shrubs, or can be trimmed to become hedges. Some bloom in the fall, and some in spring.
The reason I think of Osmanthus and not Pittosporum is the way the little flowers look, hiding amongst the leaves, and also the way you describe the fragrance, "... immaculate, so strong, smelt from far away, yet soft and perfume like at the same time."
The fact that you use the word "immaculate" sounds more like O. than Pittosporum which is so overpoweringly fragrant it can be cloying and unpleasant at close range. (my opinion, sorry)
Osmanthus does have a heavenly fragrance that for some reason can be very hard to pinpoint where it's coming from. Maybe because the flowers are so nondescript and "shy", you don't suspect (or even notice) them right away.
Thanks for the info ! Hopefully I can get some Spring Bloomers and some Autumn Bloomers to enjoy this great fragrance year round.
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 6:32
add a comment |
It looks like some type of Osmanthus to me. There are quite a few different species: O. heterophyllus, O. yunnanensis, O. fragrans (sweet olive), and many, many more! I think Home Depot's picture of their plant has the most resemblance to your photos:
Osmanthus can be gigantic trees or small shrubs, or can be trimmed to become hedges. Some bloom in the fall, and some in spring.
The reason I think of Osmanthus and not Pittosporum is the way the little flowers look, hiding amongst the leaves, and also the way you describe the fragrance, "... immaculate, so strong, smelt from far away, yet soft and perfume like at the same time."
The fact that you use the word "immaculate" sounds more like O. than Pittosporum which is so overpoweringly fragrant it can be cloying and unpleasant at close range. (my opinion, sorry)
Osmanthus does have a heavenly fragrance that for some reason can be very hard to pinpoint where it's coming from. Maybe because the flowers are so nondescript and "shy", you don't suspect (or even notice) them right away.
It looks like some type of Osmanthus to me. There are quite a few different species: O. heterophyllus, O. yunnanensis, O. fragrans (sweet olive), and many, many more! I think Home Depot's picture of their plant has the most resemblance to your photos:
Osmanthus can be gigantic trees or small shrubs, or can be trimmed to become hedges. Some bloom in the fall, and some in spring.
The reason I think of Osmanthus and not Pittosporum is the way the little flowers look, hiding amongst the leaves, and also the way you describe the fragrance, "... immaculate, so strong, smelt from far away, yet soft and perfume like at the same time."
The fact that you use the word "immaculate" sounds more like O. than Pittosporum which is so overpoweringly fragrant it can be cloying and unpleasant at close range. (my opinion, sorry)
Osmanthus does have a heavenly fragrance that for some reason can be very hard to pinpoint where it's coming from. Maybe because the flowers are so nondescript and "shy", you don't suspect (or even notice) them right away.
edited Jan 6 at 17:58
answered Jan 6 at 16:42
Lorel C.Lorel C.
3,1061618
3,1061618
Thanks for the info ! Hopefully I can get some Spring Bloomers and some Autumn Bloomers to enjoy this great fragrance year round.
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 6:32
add a comment |
Thanks for the info ! Hopefully I can get some Spring Bloomers and some Autumn Bloomers to enjoy this great fragrance year round.
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 6:32
Thanks for the info ! Hopefully I can get some Spring Bloomers and some Autumn Bloomers to enjoy this great fragrance year round.
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 6:32
Thanks for the info ! Hopefully I can get some Spring Bloomers and some Autumn Bloomers to enjoy this great fragrance year round.
– Johan88
Jan 7 at 6:32
add a comment |
This is a Fragrant Tea Olive.
I got one from amazon couple months ago and it has bloomed couple times already in my house.
The Fragrant is exactly how you described it
Here is the link...Good Luck!
Fragrant Tea Olive on Amazon
add a comment |
This is a Fragrant Tea Olive.
I got one from amazon couple months ago and it has bloomed couple times already in my house.
The Fragrant is exactly how you described it
Here is the link...Good Luck!
Fragrant Tea Olive on Amazon
add a comment |
This is a Fragrant Tea Olive.
I got one from amazon couple months ago and it has bloomed couple times already in my house.
The Fragrant is exactly how you described it
Here is the link...Good Luck!
Fragrant Tea Olive on Amazon
This is a Fragrant Tea Olive.
I got one from amazon couple months ago and it has bloomed couple times already in my house.
The Fragrant is exactly how you described it
Here is the link...Good Luck!
Fragrant Tea Olive on Amazon
answered Jan 6 at 17:31
Joseph WitJoseph Wit
5542921
5542921
add a comment |
add a comment |
Ok this one is tough; my choice is Pittosporum omeiense, native to China, fragrant, and the leaves look similar. My difficulty here is in finding references - the ITIS database does not recognize the species name even though it is pretty well scattered about over the Internet, and I don't have time to rake through all the possibilities. Hortus Third does not list it under that name, although it might be there under a synonym, reclassified into a different genus.
Colin Beckingham to the rescue again ! Thanks. I'll wait and see any other suggestions that pop up for this one. Just check P. Omeiense on Google image. Flowers seem to be 5 petalled and bell shaped whereas my flowers today look like they're 4 petalled and not bell shaped.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 14:16
See if you can find some fruits or seed capsules, that would help much. And would resolve the propagation issue.
– Colin Beckingham
Jan 6 at 14:28
Didn't notice any today. Will look next time I pass by but might not be for a while.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 15:17
add a comment |
Ok this one is tough; my choice is Pittosporum omeiense, native to China, fragrant, and the leaves look similar. My difficulty here is in finding references - the ITIS database does not recognize the species name even though it is pretty well scattered about over the Internet, and I don't have time to rake through all the possibilities. Hortus Third does not list it under that name, although it might be there under a synonym, reclassified into a different genus.
Colin Beckingham to the rescue again ! Thanks. I'll wait and see any other suggestions that pop up for this one. Just check P. Omeiense on Google image. Flowers seem to be 5 petalled and bell shaped whereas my flowers today look like they're 4 petalled and not bell shaped.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 14:16
See if you can find some fruits or seed capsules, that would help much. And would resolve the propagation issue.
– Colin Beckingham
Jan 6 at 14:28
Didn't notice any today. Will look next time I pass by but might not be for a while.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 15:17
add a comment |
Ok this one is tough; my choice is Pittosporum omeiense, native to China, fragrant, and the leaves look similar. My difficulty here is in finding references - the ITIS database does not recognize the species name even though it is pretty well scattered about over the Internet, and I don't have time to rake through all the possibilities. Hortus Third does not list it under that name, although it might be there under a synonym, reclassified into a different genus.
Ok this one is tough; my choice is Pittosporum omeiense, native to China, fragrant, and the leaves look similar. My difficulty here is in finding references - the ITIS database does not recognize the species name even though it is pretty well scattered about over the Internet, and I don't have time to rake through all the possibilities. Hortus Third does not list it under that name, although it might be there under a synonym, reclassified into a different genus.
answered Jan 6 at 14:02
Colin BeckinghamColin Beckingham
6,398326
6,398326
Colin Beckingham to the rescue again ! Thanks. I'll wait and see any other suggestions that pop up for this one. Just check P. Omeiense on Google image. Flowers seem to be 5 petalled and bell shaped whereas my flowers today look like they're 4 petalled and not bell shaped.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 14:16
See if you can find some fruits or seed capsules, that would help much. And would resolve the propagation issue.
– Colin Beckingham
Jan 6 at 14:28
Didn't notice any today. Will look next time I pass by but might not be for a while.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 15:17
add a comment |
Colin Beckingham to the rescue again ! Thanks. I'll wait and see any other suggestions that pop up for this one. Just check P. Omeiense on Google image. Flowers seem to be 5 petalled and bell shaped whereas my flowers today look like they're 4 petalled and not bell shaped.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 14:16
See if you can find some fruits or seed capsules, that would help much. And would resolve the propagation issue.
– Colin Beckingham
Jan 6 at 14:28
Didn't notice any today. Will look next time I pass by but might not be for a while.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 15:17
Colin Beckingham to the rescue again ! Thanks. I'll wait and see any other suggestions that pop up for this one. Just check P. Omeiense on Google image. Flowers seem to be 5 petalled and bell shaped whereas my flowers today look like they're 4 petalled and not bell shaped.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 14:16
Colin Beckingham to the rescue again ! Thanks. I'll wait and see any other suggestions that pop up for this one. Just check P. Omeiense on Google image. Flowers seem to be 5 petalled and bell shaped whereas my flowers today look like they're 4 petalled and not bell shaped.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 14:16
See if you can find some fruits or seed capsules, that would help much. And would resolve the propagation issue.
– Colin Beckingham
Jan 6 at 14:28
See if you can find some fruits or seed capsules, that would help much. And would resolve the propagation issue.
– Colin Beckingham
Jan 6 at 14:28
Didn't notice any today. Will look next time I pass by but might not be for a while.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 15:17
Didn't notice any today. Will look next time I pass by but might not be for a while.
– Johan88
Jan 6 at 15:17
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Gardening & Landscaping Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fgardening.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f43053%2fwhat-is-this-small-perfume-like-flower-and-how-can-i-grow-cuttings%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown