Seedlings connected to the Camelot line.
This gallery gathers Camelot-related plumeria seedlings from the Florida Colors Nursery and Tex-Kay seedling photo collection. It is meant as a grower reference for studying real seedlings, not as a promise that any seed-grown plumeria will repeat a named cultivar exactly.
Use the photos to compare flower shape, petal width, color strength, throat color, veining, and how much variation can appear in seedlings connected to the same general line. Seedlings often reveal their best character over more than one bloom cycle, so first impressions should be recorded but not rushed.
A useful way to study the Camelot group is to look beyond the first strong color impression. Compare how each bloom sits on the inflorescence, whether the petals overlap cleanly, and whether the flower would still be attractive on a mature tree. Those notes help separate a pretty first photo from a seedling that may become a dependable keeper.
When reviewing Camelot seedlings, I look for plant vigor, branching, bloom presentation, consistency, and whether the seedling has enough individual character to keep tracking.
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