In Flower This Week
A weekly news sheet prepared by a Gardens' volunteer.
  Numbers in square brackets [ ] refer to garden bed Sections. Plants in flower are in bold type.
View past issues of 'In Flower This Week'.
23-30 December 2011
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| Leptospermum 'Rudolph' click for larger image | 
Tis Christmas time and there’s many flowers  to admire.  To walk among the striking  white trunks of the eucalypts, the Sydney Basin Flora to the Rock Garden and so  through the Rainforest to the Visitors Centre where there is a wall of orchids  inside. This walk follows the Main Path which commences at the far end of the  Ellis Rowan Garden.
              
Follow the path where the branches of Kunzea  ericoides [Section 11] clad with soft white flowers arch over the  path.  Eremaea violacea subsp. violacea [Section 10] is a low dense  shrub with purple toning while Eremaea  beaufortioides [Section 9], also low and dense with heads of orange  flowers.  The bed of daisies is yellow  with flowers including Chrysocephalum apiculatum [Section  303] displaying its small yellow flower heads on short upright stems.  Opposite is a group of kangaroo paws, many of  which are scattered throughout the Gardens.   Here, Anigozanthos flavidus [Section 8] has both matt green and  red ‘paw’ flowers on tall stems.
              
Leptospermum ‘Rudolph’ [Section 30] is really showy.  This  large spreading shrub is clad in profusion with green centred rich pink  flowers.  Almost opposite, Alyogyne huegelii [Section 30]  has large white hibiscus  flowers scattered over the dense shrub.   Smaller shrubs close by include Grevillea treueriana [Section 30]  bearing bright red toothbrush-like flowers from its arching branches and Verticordia  galeata [Section 30]  quite  small clad with bright yellow flowers.  Banksia  blechnifolia [Section 25] is a dense prostrate plant with upright  deeply lobed leaves, the new leaves a tan colour and reddish brown upright flower  spikes, all appearing to sit on the ground.   There too is Banksia petiolaris [Section 25] with similar structure but with  upright narrow toothed leaves and pale green flower spikes. At the corner Grevillea ‘Coconut Ice’ [Section 25]   displays its large terminal red flowers on the low spreading shrub.  Across the road grevilleas include Grevillea ‘Lady O’ [Section 26] is dense  with fiery red spider-like flowers.   Edging the path Grevillea ‘Poorinda Adorning’[Section 24] is low and spreading bearing  bright red spider-like flowers.
              
The path then wanders through the Sydney  Region Gully where Scaevola hookeri [Section 191s] is a dense groundcover  speckled with tiny white fan-shaped flowers.   At the turn-off to the Hothouse containing many interesting plants, Scaevola  albida [Section 191j] has a covering of pink fan-shaped flowers  over the low shrub. Christmas Bells, Blandfordia grandiflora [Section  191u] dangles its red with yellow bells on upright stems.  Towards the exit to this section flannel  flowers, Actinotus helianthi [Section 191 l] display their soft  white flowers with velvety grey foliage and Scaevola ramosissima [Section 191 l] creeps about the rocks with purple flowers along the small  vines.
              
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| Verticordia galeata click for larger image | 
Stroll across the Eucalyptus Lawn to the  Rock Garden laden with interesting flowers.   At the entrance in a pot, Ptilotus exaltatus var. semilanatus [Section 15r] is a  small herb with tinsel pink flower balls.   Beyond the relaxing waterfall Grevillea robusta [Section 78]  displays its large golden flower spikes seen above the tree tops and in front,  about the rocks the water dragons sunbake.    So to the Rainforest Gully, so cool,  so green at its exit, Rhododendron macgregoriae x lochiae [Section 313]  low spreading shrubs beautiful with bell  shaped open clusters of orange-red flowers. Then down the ramp to the Visitor Centre.
            
These gardens, a place of beauty, of  relaxation, a joy to all who walk among our wonderful Australian plants, the  birds and water dragons too. Season’s Greetings to you all.
                                                                                                                   
              Barbara  Daly  
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