The Poinsettia, known internationally as the flower of
Christmas, originated in Mexico, with the Aztecs first calling it a “cuetlaxochitl,” which means "mortal flower that perishes and withers like
all that is pure.” A Mexican legend states that, long ago, the people liked
to bring flowers to fill up Christ’s manger. However there was a poor, young
boy who was unable to afford flowers. An
angel appeared to him and instructed him to pick some weeds from the side of
the road. When he put them in the manger, they turned into gorgeous red
flowers, which became known as “Flor de Noche Buena”- the flower of Christmas
Eve.
The name poinsettia comes from Dr
Joel Robert Poinsett, the first United States ambassador to Mexico in 1825.
When his duties were complete four years later, Dr Poinsett brought the flower
back to the United States, where he began to grow them in his greenhouse. By
1836 they had become widely popular across the south, where they then became
known as Poinsettias, in his honour.
Dec. 12 is celebrated in the United States as National
Poinsettia Day.
Poinsettias are members of the Euphorbiaceae Family. There are over 7,500
different plants that make up this large plant family, from the low-growing
garden weeds known as spurges to the Candelabra Tree (Euphorbia ingens), of
South Africa. The poinsettia was given the name
Euphorbia pulcherrima by the German botanist, Karl Ludwig,
literally being translated as “
the most
beautiful euphorbia.”
In
their natural wild setting, poinsettias are perennial flowering shrubs that can
grow between 10 and 15 feet tall, becoming troublesome weeds. The actual
flowers of the poinsettia are fairly small. What most people see and call the
flower are actually colourful modified leaves known as bracts. The colourful
bracts begin their annual show from late October – January.
Red is the original and most common
colour; however there are over 100 variants. Ranging from white, to “Ice Punch”
the newly developed colour that was created in 2006 by Ecke Ranch, as pictured on the bottom left.