Dianella revoluta 'DTN03'
A clumping rhizomatous evergreen perennial shrub blue-green foliage to around 60cms with pale blue flowers in spring also small green berries.
Dianella revoluta 'REV101'
Clumping plant with dark green strappy leaves which fold over slightly, giving it good ground coverage.
Well displayed terminal blue flowers in Spring.
Dianella tasmanica 'DT23'
Strappy leaved suckering shrub with broad arching leaves to about 0.5m high and blue – yellow flowers from September to November.
Dianella tasmanica 'Little Devil'
Compact strappy leaved shrub distinguished by an attractive red tinge to the base of the leaves (Basal leaf sheath: anthocyanin colouration (in summer) red-purple. Develops attractive purple berries in Summer.
Dianella tasmanica 'Little Devil'
Compact strappy leaved shrub distinguished by an attractive red tinge to the base of the leaves (Basal leaf sheath: anthocyanin colouration (in summer) red-purple. Develops attractive purple berries in Summer.
Dianella tasmanica 'NPW2'
Strappy leaved shrub grows to about 500mm in diameter with purplish new foliage.
Dianella tasmanica 'Rainbow'
Strappy leaved shrub grows to about 500mm in diametre with pinkish red new foliage that ages to a green and white variegation.
Grevillea 'Little Jessie'
A dense, grey-green, shrub 2-4 m high 2-4 m wide. Branchlets ascending, angular in cross-section, ribbed, slender, densely white silky-tomentose with brownish-green striations. Leaves 2.5-3.2 cm long, 1.8-2.4 cm wide, obovate, trisect ; leaf lobes 3, slightly pungent, grey-green; texture leathery. Conflorescence terminal or subterminal, mainly on the upper parts of the branch. Flowers: perianth 8.5 mm long, 2.2 mm
wide, pistil 30 mm long, style 27-28 mm long. Flower colour: buds grey-green, perianth pale-pink outside, the upper tepals deep red inside; limb creamy-yellow; style and style-end red; pollen-presenter yellowish;
overall effect is apricot-pink . Flowering occurs from July through to January. Infertile.
Diagnosis:
G. asparagoides differs in its open, cylindrical inflorescences with glandular hairs.
Similar hybrids:
Grevillea ‘Winpara Gold’.
G. ‘Winpara Gold has leaves twice-divided, perianths glabrous on the outside, hairy on the inside and yellow styles.
Callistemon 'Tin-Sal Glow'
Fairly open habit, 1.5 m wide by 3-5 m tall, many-stemmed with
a swollen base. Bark light grey, fissured. New growth pink. Spike
moderately open, c. 3.5 cm wide; axis hairy at first. Leaves narrowly
linear to oblanceolate, (3.0-) 3.5-5.5 cm long, c.0.32-0.77 cm wide,
margins slightly recurved (on herbarium specimens at least); reticulate
venation clearly visible. Stamens c. 4.8-5.4 cm, c. 1.5-2.1 cm long,
pinkish at the tips, almost white at the base. Anthers yellow. Fruit is
barrel-shaped ca 0.38-0.45 cm wide, ca 0.4 cm high, aperture not
constricted, surface smooth. Flowering time spring to autumn.
Diagnosis:
Characterised by the 'glowing' appearance of the new growth and
flower spikes (produced by the pale stamen bases). Its characteristics
compared to other forms are summarised in the following table:
C. 'Glasshouse Country'
C. recurvus
C. salignus
More red colouration in the flower
Paler flower colour
Flower colour
Shorter flower spikes: (c. 3.3-5.5cm not 5.0-5.5 (-7.0)cm)
Fewer flowers in spike
-
Pinkish, not silvery green, new growth
Paler leaf colour
Smaller leaves
-
Mostly longer leaves
-
-
More spreading habit
Shorter habit
Grevillea 'Winpara Gem'
This cultivar is a dense shrub to 2m tall by up to 3m wide.
The leaves are grey green and deeply divided (almost to the midrib) and are
up to 6cm long. The leaf edges are rolled under. The venation under the
leaf is particularly prominent. Each leaf lobe has a short but pungent tip.
The upper surface of the leaf has scattered silky hairs while the lower
surface other than the veins is closely covered with a dense mat of closely
appressed silky hairs. The branchlets are also covered by fine hairs that
diminish as the wood matures. The flowers are in racemes ca. 25mm long
produced terminally on short lateral branchlets arising from the older
wood. This sometimes leads to the flowers being partially obscured by
younger growth. Individual flowers are densely packed on each raceme. The
perianth is dark in colour, but appears lighter due to the dense covering
of fine white hairs. The perianth is 7-8mm long and splits into four
segments. The reddish style is hooked when it first emerges but soon
straightens, measuring ca. 14mm long. Flowers are produced from April to
mid October.
Diagnosis:
G. olivacea:
5m tall and spreading. Leaves up to 70mm long x 20mm wide;
oblanceolate with an emarginate apex; short, very scattered silky hairs on
the upper surface but appearing glabrous; densely silky hairy on the upper
surface. Flowers in small compact racemes on older wood; racemes short and
rounded; perianth pale on the outside due to the dense coating of silky
hairs; inside perianth glabrous; style glabrous and red; flowers
winter/spring.
Grevillea 'Winpara Gem':
2m tall by up to 3m wide. Leaves up to 60mm long x
35mm wide at the widest point; regularly pinnatisect; lobes linear; lobes
1-2mm broad; scattered fine silky hairs above; moderately dense silky hairs
below. flowers in 25mm long racemes terminally on short branchlets arising
from older wood; racemes straight; perianth appears pale on outer surface
due to dense silky hairs; inside of perianth glabrous; style glabrous and
red; flowers April to mid October.
G. thelemanniana:
can vary in height but usually .3-1.2m tall by 2-3m wide.
Leaves from 15-50mm long by ca. 20mm wide; from 3 lobed to pinnatisect;
lobes linear; lobes 1-5mm broad; covered in fine silky hairs. Flowers in
50mm long racemes terminally on newer wood; racemes reflexed; perianth
glabrous on the outer surface; inside of perianth densely hairy; style
glabrous and scarlet; flowers May to September.
The leaves more closely resemble G. thelemanniana but are not as much
divided. Racemes are also similar but shorter in Grevillea 'Winpara Gem'.