| White flowers reach 12 inches diameter have a pink streak down the center, outer tepals are drooping rather than saucer-shaped. Original seed is from India, named in 1961 at the Strybing Arboretum, San Francisco, California. Alba varieties flower at 15 years old, much earlier than the species. Tall deciduous trees, reaching 115 feet tall in the wild, 30-60 feet in cultivation. Bark is grayish tan, twigs are smooth and tan colored, sometimes can become almost black. The terminal buds are covered with yellow hairs. Leaves are 6-12 inches long, dark green, smooth on the upper sides, pale green with fine hairs below. Fragrant flowers. The stamens are rose colored. Native to Himalayan forests at 7000-11000 feet elevation. Once a staple tree in the forest it is much diminished due to its harvest for firewood and timber for planks and tea boxes. The species matures at 25-30 years of age, before that it sets no seeds. Many consider this the most beautiful of the magnolias. Flowers in early spring so it must be sheltered from frost and winds. It is often grafted on to different root stock for earlier maturing plants. |