From “Chrysanthemum” in Japanese Gardens by Wendy B. Murphy:
“Chrysanthemums have been cultivated in the Orient for thousands of years, and in Japan they have come to symbolize longevity. A stylized 16-petaled chrysanthemum is the official insignia of the Japanese Emperor, while lesser members of the Emperor’s family wear chrysanthemum insignia containing 14 petals. Possibly because of the mystique surrounding it, the plant has special importance in a Japanese garden. It is often elaborately trained by pinching back and disbudding to form pyramids and cascades of bloom, some of which require extensive bamboo understructures. But it is also allowed to grow more naturally. Few gardens, in fact, are without at least one example of this major flowering plant of the Japanese autumn.
“The florist’s chrysanthemum probably originated in China centuries ago. It comes in many sizes and shapes, but its flowers all have the same basic arrangement: they are made up of a band of outer petals, called ray florets, and a circle of inner petals, called disc florets…. In some, the ray florets curve inward and overlap to form large globelike blooms; these are said to belong to the incurve class. In others, the ray florets curve backward in the manner of the petals of an aster, and are classed as decorative or aster-flowering blooms…. In all these flowering types, the colors range from white and yellow to purple and dark red.”
From “The Chrysanthemum” in The Garden Flowers of China by H. L. Li:
“Probably the most valuable contribution in horticulture from China to the rest of the world is the garden chrysanthemum, one of the most popular of all flowers. Though the flowering season of chrysanthemum is relatively short — about six weeks — its autumn-blooming habit, at a time when most of the other flowers are far past their prime and practically through blooming, is distinctly a most desirable characteristic. Probably no other flower in cultivation can compare with these autumn beauties in numerous forms, colors, and variations of growth. The chrysanthemum’s endless changes in form and color appeal to the interest of all flower lovers.
“The garden chrysanthemum is exclusively of Chinese origin. However, its origin as a cultivated plant and its early history of cultivation in China are a controversial problem much discussed in Western horticultural literature since the early nineteenth century…. Botanists now generally attribute the origin of the garden chrysanthemum… to two species: Chrysanthemum indicum(or Chrysanthemum japonicum) and Chrysanthemum morifolium.
“Our present garden forms of this flower are the result of crossing and the variation of progenies of these two species. It is generally believed that the small-flowered, hardy garden types of chrysanthemum were derived from the former, and the larger-flowered florists’ types from the latter, of the two species.”
Hello!
This is the first of two posts with photos of the last batch of chrysanthemums that posed for me toward the end of 2025 at Oakland Cemetery.
From a distance — or with a wide-angle shot — these look like they’re all the same kind of plant…

… but once I started working on the photos, I realized I had two different cultivars here. Their colors were the same (yellow/orange centers with white petals) — but a closer view of the flower petals revealed their separate identities. Here we see the two varieties side-by-side, where one variety has produced long, slender petals in just one or two circular rows; and the other variety has produced much shorter petals with multiple overlapping layers. The two varieties cluster their flowers differently, too: each stem of the variety on the left typically produced three to five flowers per stem; whereas those on the right produced a dozen or more tightly compacted crowns of flowers, looking almost like a rounded bouquet or a nosegay arrangement ready to be picked.


While the leaves of both plants sport a similar appearance, their overall height is different: those on the left are much shorter than those on the right. That enabled Oakland’s landscapers to arrange them so they grew as shown in the photos: the plants cascade like a waterfall over the wall between the two varieties, with nature doing as nature does and letting the plants blend themselves together at this boundary. And as an alert viewer, you might notice something else about this grouping: the chrysanthemum Ajania pacifica that I posted about previously (see Ajania pacifica, the Gold and Silver Chrysanthemum (1 of 2) and Ajania pacifica, the Gold and Silver Chrysanthemum (2 of 2)) has been used to create a colorful border for the whole scene, with some of its plants spreading into this sculpted landscape by inserting themselves among the two yellow and white varieties.
As is described in the second quotation above, these two variants are very likely to be hybrids derived from their endemic chrysanthemum ancestors, Chrysanthemum indicum and Chrysanthemum morifolium. Either plant could also be known by several common names — including Florist’s Chrysanthemum, Florist’s Daisy, Garden Chrysanthemum, Hardy Garden Mum, and Garden Mum — that reflect their use in gardens and the florist trades. They’re both so representative of chrysanthemums as a whole that PlantNet doesn’t identify them distinctly; it simply identifies my photo subjects as “Chrysanthemums (genus)” since its cultivars are so many, so common, and so similar in appearance.

But that they’re common as chrysanthemum representatives and prevalent in many gardens doesn’t make them any less photogenic. They look quite striking arranged as a group, even more so with the rich green backdrop provided by their abundant leaves, and with the presence of randomly appearing yellow and orange Ajania pacifica blooms adding even more color contrasts.
Thanks for reading and taking a look!
































































































