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'.
6 January 2012
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| Rhododendron lochiae click for larger image | 
The New Year flowers in these gardens  continue to enjoy the hot days.  Notice  the abundance of clusters of white lacy flowers on the large trees, Angophora  costata [Section 168] in the north car park.  Even the colourful trunks are worth  admiring.  However this walk is a stroll  in the Rock Garden.  To arrive there  follow the road on the far side of the Rainforest Gully, turning right on  reaching the grayish Main Path which will reach the waterfall.  Along this path Rhododendron lochiae[Section  110] is a low spreading shrub with an abundance of bright red flared tubular  flowers in whorls.
In a clockwise direction and beside the  stairs, a teatree Leptospermum deuense [Section 15c] has graceful arching  branches clad with prominent white petalled flowers.  Opposite, Grevillea ‘Poorinda Royal Mantle’[15d] is a dense ground cover clad with  many  red toothbrush-like flowers,  flowing down to the pools below. Brachyscome multifida [Section  15d] is a small mounded plant with soft foliage and dotted with deep mauve  daisy-like flowers.  Close by is Platytheca  galioides [Section 15d],  also  small, bearing deep blue  bell-shaped  flowers.  Lomandra multiflora [Section 15d] is there too, with arching grey-green strappy leaves and stems  covered with deep cream flower spikes.   Beside the path Chrysocephalum semiamplexicaule [Section 15d] is low and sprawling with clusters of small bright yellow  flower heads on the terminal branches. Dampiera stricta [Section 15f] is  a suckering plant with blue flowers, seen crowded between  the rocks while on the other side of  this bed,  Rulingia luteiflora [Section  15f]  is a dense medium size shrub  clad with small yellow flowers  At its  base Verticordia  pennigera [Section 15f] is pretty with a covering of pink lacy  flowers over the  dwarf shrub.  In the opposite corner behind the seat, the  native violet, Viola hederacea[Section 15a] is a low suckering groundcover  with almost rounded leaves and an abundance of small white-mauve flowers on  short stems.
              
Edging the upper road groups of kangaroo  paws, Anigozanthos flavidus [Section 15h] with  rust-red ‘paw’ flowers on long upright stems  are so bright.  Scaevola albida [Section 15h] is also bright with a profusion of  blue fan-shaped flowers over the low spreading  shrub.  A plant with white flowers is  seen behind.  Protruding through the  close dense shrub the rich blue flowers of Dampiera sylvestris [Section  15h]  a suckering plant, can be seen.
              
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| HIbbertia vestita click for larger image | 
Take the path down between the grass trees, Xanthorrhoea johnsonii [Sections 15, 14],  where, opposite a hedge of Banksia  integrifolia [Section 15L] with silver backed leaves, Hibbertia vestita [Section 15k]is a neatly rounded shrub bearing yellow flowers.   Across the road Senecio linearifolius [Section 15r] has sprays of yellow flowers on its arching braches while Melaleuca  nesophila [Section 15r], of similar size, bears rounded clusters of  pink flowers.  Opposite, another  hibbertia, Hibbertia pedunculata [Section 15s]  falls down   the rocks, also with small yellow flowers.  Around the corner to the left, Goodenia  macmillani [Section 15r] is a loosely arranged plant displaying its  lovely pink flowers.  
              
Looking towards the waterfall the vista of the ponds with surrounding shrubs, in front, Lythrum salicaria [Section 15q] tall with spikes of purple flowers, and a tall herb, Cladium procerum [Section 15q] densely tipped with brown nuts, with bird calls and not forgetting the Water Dragons of all ages.
Relaxing place, this rock Garden.......Barbara Daly
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