Gomphrena flaccida 'Pink Gem'
Compact pink flowered selection. Plants grow to about 40 cm high by 30 cm wide with pink-purple flower heads (about 10-20 mm in diameter) which remain on the plant for months, and contrast nicely with its lush bright green foliage.
Gomphrena leontopodioides 'Empress'
Long lived annual, plants grow to about 30 cm high by 30 cm wide with globular purple flower heads (about 35 mm in diameter) which remain on the plant for months, contrasting nicely with its grey-green foliage.
Gomphrena leontopodioides 'X115-32-5'
Long lived annual, plants grow to about 30 cm high by 30 cm wide with large globular with mid purple-pink tepals and a white corolla tube (about 35 mm in diameter) which remain on the plant for months, contrasting nicely with its grey-green foliage.
Grevillea alpina 'Grampians Gold'
This cultivar has golden yellow flowers and the perianth is
covered in prominent brownish hairs. All other characteristics are as for
G. alpina.
Diagnosis:
Grevillea 'Grampians Gold' has golden yellow flowers and
prominent rusty brown hairs covering the perianth segments. This
distinguishes it from the normal colour forms of G. alpina which are red
and yellow or red and cream.
Grevillea 'Apricot Tingle'
Shrub 30cm (h) x 1–1.5m (w)
Flowers:
Spring–summer, apricot; conflorescence 35mm x 25mm
Foliage colour:
Green
Comparators:
Grevillea ‘New Blood’ and Grevillea juniperina Tinga form.
Reasons for distinctiveness:
This selection has prolific orange flowers and
low spreading growth habit.
Grevillea 'Coastal Prestige'
Fast growing large upright shrub 3-4m, large rosy pink terminal flower spikes from Autumn to Spring.
Correa reflexa var. speciosa 'Portland Belle'
Small, dense shrub 50cm in diameter. Flowers colour carmine red with green tips and white throat, ca. 3cm long by 4cm wide from April to August in Victoria.
May be a hybrid between Correa reflexa var. speciosa and C. alba var. alba with distinctive characteristic of the flower splitting.
Correa 'Vanilla Cream'
Upright dense shrub growing to 1.5 m high by 1 m wide. The plant has long ascendant stems, particularly on the outside of the bush. Leaves are ovate to elliptical in shape with undulating margins and obtuse tips, 35 mm x 22 mm in size, dark green, glabrous and leathery on top, pale green and velvety underneath with scattered rust coloured stellate hairs concentrated on the midvein. Petioles are 3 mm long. Flowers occur either singly or in small clusters at the ends of lateral branchlets. Corolla is creamy white in colour, 20 mm long x 8 mm wide before splitting. Petal tips
have a light dusting of tan coloured stellate hairs and are strongly splayed outwards. Stamens are made up of tan coloured anthers on white filaments, slightly longer than the petals and splayed outwards in the petal splits. Calyx is green, square in cross section, with four shallow
lobes, the points occurring where the petals are fused in the corolla. The pedicel is 5 mm long. Peak flowering occurs in Autumn and Winter.
Diagnosis:
This cultivar appears to be a C. alba x backhouseana hybrid. The flowers of C. alba x backhouseana from Boat Harbour in Tasmania are larger and they have a darker concentration of tan coloured stellate hairs on the tips. The flowers of C. ‘Dusty Bells’ are strongly covered in tan coloured
stellate hairs giving them a much darker appearance. The typical C. alba var alba corolla splits to the calyx and the petals are strongly splayed outwards exposing the nectary in the base of the flower.