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Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 11:42 am
by Gerard
I took a few hours to update my photos of natives (all taken in one session Jan 2018)
acacia howittii 1.jpg
acacia howittii 2.jpg
banksia integrifolia 1.jpg
banksia integrifolia 2.jpg
banksia integrifolia 3.jpg
banksia integrifolia 4.jpg
banksia marginata.jpg
banksia serrata.jpg
corymbia citrodora.jpg
corymbia ficifolia.jpg
eucalyptus meliodora.jpg
eucalyptus pulchella.jpg
kunzea ericoides.jpg
unidentified euc.jpg
Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 11:48 am
by Gerard
leptospermum laevigatum.jpg
leptospermum lanigerum.jpg
leptospermum merinda 2.jpg
leptospermum petersonii.jpg
leptospermum sp..jpg
melaleuca decussata.jpg
melaleuca ericafolia 1.jpg
melaleuca ericafolia 2.jpg
melaleuca stypheliodes.jpg
PJF 1.jpg
pjf 2.jpg
Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 12:20 pm
by treeman
The first Banksia has superb branch arrangement. Perfect.
I see you shortened that first left branch on the large ericifiloia?
Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 12:29 pm
by Gerard
treeman wrote:The first Banksia has superb branch arrangement. Perfect.
I see you shortened that first left branch on the large ericifiloia?
yes I decided to keep some of it instead of complete removal of that branch
Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 12:50 pm
by bodhidharma
Somebody is getting into Natives

For some reason i love the citrodora and think it will be stunning in time. Thanks for the share My Man

Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 1:10 pm
by Rory
bodhidharma wrote:Somebody is getting into Natives

For some reason i love the citrodora and think it will be stunning in time. Thanks for the share My Man

There are some beautiful trees there Gerard.
When you water the trunk of a Eucalytpus citriodora, they come alive. In my opinion they have the most spectacularly coloured trunk of any tree I have ever seen or grown. Combined with the extremely strong lemon fragrance of the tree, its one of the best bonsai candidates of all time in my opinion.
I love the colour of the foliage on the Euc meliodora. I tried my hand at these years ago, but I didn't have enough levels of sunlight for them to grow.
It looks lovely.
Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 1:15 pm
by rodm
What a wonderful collection of natives

makes me want start all over again
Cheers RodM
Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 1:20 pm
by Ryceman3
I can only echo what those above have said ... very nice collection of natives (and some great pots to go along with your trees too). They are a credit to you.

Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 3:50 pm
by SueBee
Just Wow- gorgeous collection and the pots go so well too....I am inspired...well done...would love it if you could name the species under each photo or am I asking too much????

Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 4:05 pm
by Gerard
SueBee wrote:Just Wow- gorgeous collection and the pots go so well too....I am inspired...well done...would love it if you could name the species under each photo or am I asking too much????

If you are using a pc all you need to do is hover over each pic for species name, tablet might be more difficult. I am not able to edit the post
Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 4:09 pm
by Sammy D
Nice
Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 7:42 pm
by shibui
You have certainly been busy Gerard and have got some nice specimens under way.
Vic Native Bonsai Club must be having a positive influence on at least one member.
[quote][/When you water the trunk of a Eucalytpus citriodora, they come alive. In my opinion they have the most spectacularly coloured trunk of any tree I have ever seen or grown. Combined with the extremely strong lemon fragrance of the tree, its one of the best bonsai candidates of all time in my opinion.quote]
I do agree that they are great Rory but just a little frost sensitive for those of us in cooler climes

Mine gets burnt down to the lignotuber every winter

then shoots again every spring

Been doing that for at least 8 years now. I keep thinking about getting rid of it but then feel obliged to hang onto it because it has survived so much against the odds. I know there are other eucs with equally, if not even better, bark and trunk - snow gum and a species we saw in the WA goldfields both come immediately to mind.
Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 8:39 pm
by Rory
shibui wrote:You have certainly been busy Gerard and have got some nice specimens under way.
Vic Native Bonsai Club must be having a positive influence on at least one member.
[/When you water the trunk of a Eucalytpus citriodora, they come alive. In my opinion they have the most spectacularly coloured trunk of any tree I have ever seen or grown. Combined with the extremely strong lemon fragrance of the tree, its one of the best bonsai candidates of all time in my opinion.quote]
I do agree that they are great Rory but just a little frost sensitive for those of us in cooler climes

Mine gets burnt down to the lignotuber every winter

then shoots again every spring

Been doing that for at least 8 years now. I keep thinking about getting rid of it but then feel obliged to hang onto it because it has survived so much against the odds. I know there are other eucs with equally, if not even better, bark and trunk - snow gum and a species we saw in the WA goldfields both come immediately to mind.
Yep, the pauciflora snow gum is amazing. But I’ll have to take a photo of the trunk the next time I’m up the back, of the citriodora trunk. The emerald green is just amazing. That’s such a shame about the die back.
Is it Euc citriodora or Corymbia citriodora? My bad. I have corymbia. I noticed differences in the tube stock between the two of them from a young age, and much preferred corymbia.
Google says there is no difference, so it might be genetic variation, but the stock that I bought from castle hill native nursery many years ago that said corymbia kept the jeuvenile foliage much longer, (the beautiful strong scented sand paper foliage), whereas the ones that say eucalytpus, didn’t develop the jeuvenile foliage more than just the first few leaves.
Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 9:12 pm
by shibui
You are correct with the updated name Rory - Corymbia citriodora. There's no such plant as Euc citriodora now as far as I'm aware. I'm old so still using the outdated names unless I concentrate
I have noticed a variation in seedlings from seed sourced from the same tree. I thought maybe hybridisation? but it might just be normal genetic variability. A number of my seedlings retained the juvenile foliage and had a more stunted growth habit. Most have gradually died off except for one sick looking one along the driveway, now dwarfed by the stronger growing siblings. I have not germinated more to see whether this occurs in all batches from all sources.
Re: Natives from my collection
Posted: February 1st, 2018, 9:45 pm
by boom64
Fantastic collection Gerard ,love the Melaleuca Ericafolia 2 .Has an almost regal look about it..