Small-leafed Eucalypts
Posted: January 24th, 2019, 8:48 am
Here you go Neal, Eucs with small leaves and internodes. Well, smaller than a Japanese. maple.
E.cinerea, beautiful blue-grey, and barks up well. Local to Canberra.
E. parvifolia, also local, not sure how fast it grows.
E. dalrympleana, same.
E. crenulata, the best in my opinion - beautiful small leaves, barks up early and grows strongly here. Anyone in Melbourne or Canberra who doesn't have a dozen of them is seriously missing out.
A larger cinerea, about five or six years.
E. scoparia - internodes are starting to get a bit long, but the bark is wonderful.
E. stellulata, another local, curious angular habit.
E. bridgesiana, grows strongly, just had a haircut. ?Six years.
They are all, except the last, growing on, but you get the idea. Plenty to choose from.
Some others: E. orbifolia and E. crucis (a bit off the beaten track), E. aggregata, and E. rubida. And of course E. nichollii, but I don't like it because it is so ruthlessly top dominant. PeterH has posted some excellent examples.
Have fun!
Gavin
E.cinerea, beautiful blue-grey, and barks up well. Local to Canberra.
E. parvifolia, also local, not sure how fast it grows.
E. dalrympleana, same.
E. crenulata, the best in my opinion - beautiful small leaves, barks up early and grows strongly here. Anyone in Melbourne or Canberra who doesn't have a dozen of them is seriously missing out.
A larger cinerea, about five or six years.
E. scoparia - internodes are starting to get a bit long, but the bark is wonderful.
E. stellulata, another local, curious angular habit.
E. bridgesiana, grows strongly, just had a haircut. ?Six years.
They are all, except the last, growing on, but you get the idea. Plenty to choose from.
Some others: E. orbifolia and E. crucis (a bit off the beaten track), E. aggregata, and E. rubida. And of course E. nichollii, but I don't like it because it is so ruthlessly top dominant. PeterH has posted some excellent examples.
Have fun!
Gavin