Camia or White Ginger (Hedychium philippinense or Hedychium coronarium)

Our Camia plant (also called White Ginger) continued to bloom profusely with the rains and cool weather. With so many flowers, it's so extraordinarily fragrant. I smell it when I open the bedroom window.


This plant started from a bulb in a pot last year. It's now planted in the ground, is around 4 feet high and continues to grow.



Here's a bit of info from pnh.com:
Scientific Name: Hedychium philippinense K. Schum.

Family: Zingiberaceae

Common Name: Philippine Garland, Philippine Camia
Local Name: Camia, White Ginger


Description: An epiphytic herb with 1 to 3 stems. The terminal flowers are white with a shade of yellow and with crinkled margins. The fruit is a three-sided capsule which turns orange-yellow and bears dark red seeds.

Habitat: Epiphytic on trunks and branches of trees in primary forests at altitudes 900 to 1,800m.

Conservation Status: Rare



I didn't think they are an endangered species but according to wikipedia, they are included in the Philippines' endnagered list. Elsewhere in the globe, it's considered common.

Here's an interestning entry from wikipedia:
The White ginger lily (Hedychium coronarium) is originally from the Himalayas region of Nepal and India where it is known as dolan champa दोलन चम्पा in Hindi, takhellei angouba in Manipuri, sontaka in Marathi, and suruli sugandhi in Kannada. The species was introduced to Hawaii by settlers. The native Hawaiians refer to white ginger as 'awapuhi', using the juice of mature seed head as a hair and skin treatment.

In Brazil it is very common and considered to be an invasive weed. It was introduced in the era of slavery, brought to the country by African slaves who used its leaves as mattresses.

In Cuba it is the National Flower, known as "Mariposa blanca" literally "White Butterfly Flower", due to its similarity with a flying white butterfly. This particular species is incredibly fragrant and women used to adorn themselves with these flowers in Spanish colonial times; because of the intricate structure of the inflorescence, women hid and carried secret messages important to the independence cause under it. It is said that a guajiro's (farmer's) house is not complete without a white ginger in its garden. Today the plant has gone wild in the cool rainy mountains in Sierra del Rosario, Pinar del Rio Province in the west, Escambray Mountains in the center of the island, and in Sierra Maestra in the very west of it, but the plant is not endemic of Cuba. Its fragrance can be extracted by "enfleurage".

Here's a closeup of our Camia or the "White Butterfly Flower" as the Cubans call it.





Go ahead, post your comment below!

ChrisP said...

My mother bought some seedlings thinking it was Casa Blanca then when it bloomed I searched on the net if it was really Casa Blanca but instead it's called Camia (which I found here..lol)

By the way, don't you have a facebook page? I'm enjoying your blog, reading it from cover to cover.

Blackdove said...

FB page, haven't had time getting to it yet. Thanx for dropping by.

Anonymous said...

hi, i hv plant dis year ago but til now flowers r coming. Wht wil b d reason?

Anonymous said...

I was amazed by the fragrant smell of this flowers. When we were in Balintawak Quezon City we had around fifty or more of this plants that bears flowers almost daily now that i am over 60 still missing this flowers a lot actually when i was in Elementary school i used to bring some of this flowers to my teachers kaya i had no worry about my grades. My question is i found difficulties in finding this plants right now any idea where i could find a place where i could purchase this plants can you help me please!!! Thanks !! Chito clopez_rig534z@yahoo.com

Anonymous said...

can camia grow by using freight farming?

Blackdove said...

Not sure what you mean by freight farming.

Unknown said...

Hello, can I ask where to buy

Carrie de Vera Torres said...

My camia plant has been in the same pot for a year. It keeps sprouting new stems but NO FLOWERS. I have added a “fence” around the pot so the tall stems will not break. I can only grow it in a pot (I live in an apartment). Do I have hope to see flowers?

Carrie de Vera Torres said...

My camia is not flowering for 2 years now. It is potted because I cannot plant it on the ground; I live in an apartment. I have repotted it twice, put lots of water every day, it’s all leaves, no flower.




Celeste said...

Where are you located? I have some growing in my backyard.

Blackdove said...

Sorry, I couldn't help you there. They're not that common in garden stores.

Blackdove said...

Tnx Carrie de Vera Torres. Does your camia plant get enough sunlight? Ours, only get morning sun - around 6 hours maximum.

FECGP: Filipino Executive Council of Greater Philadelphia said...

I want to buy some Camia bulbs to plant willing to pay DHL or Fedex to Philadelphia let me know. Freddy Panes

Blackdove said...

Regrets, Freddy, as I no longer have the plant. Thnx for dropping by.

Anonymous said...

Hi, plant biologist here. I think what was meant about Camia being included in the Philippine's endangered list is because of the following reasons:

1. Your cultivating the wrong species in the same genus.
2. It is native and endemic in the Philippines and those plants that are being cultivated elsewhere in the world are only introduced specimens that were grown unchecked. The wild varieties of this species is in fact, endangered because only a handful specimens are still alive today in the wild. These is the reason why it is listed as endangered in Ph and not elsewhere.

But if I go to a botanical reason, reason 1 will be more logical.

Anonymous said...

I think you should put it on a bigger pot and put it on a sunny area and well watered soil. After that you can see they will bloom