Chrysocephalum baxteri 'Midget'
Leafy, compact, low shrub, 15cm high by 30cm wide, with very
small white everlasting flowerheads with yellow discs. As the shrub matures
it develops woody basal stems. Leaves 1.5-4mm long by 0.75mm wide,
alternate, sessile, recurved, apex obtuse. Upper surfaces of leaves
glabrous, lower surface tomentose, flowering stem 5-7cm long, flowerhead
10-15mm across. The rays are fringed. Flowerheads are solitary and
terminal. Flowering period is spring followed by a brief second period of
blooms in January when flowerheads are smaller. Outer involucral bracts are
tan in colour.
Diagnosis:
This cultivar has all the characteristics of the usual forms of
C. baxteri but is distinguished by the diminutive size of all the
characters of the plant - leaves, rays, flowerhead and fruit.
Crowea saligna 'PPCS1'
Small shrub with pink star flowers in Autumn and Winter. Spontaneous mutation: a sport appeared from Crowea saligna that had larger leaves and a taller height.
Dianella caerulea 'DBB03'
A small clumping plant 50cm high x 40cm wide with blue strappy leaves and purple and yellow flowers from September to November.
Dianella caerulea 'DC101'
A small clumping plant 50cm high x 40cm wide with red basal leaves and purple and yellow flowers from September to November.
Dianella caerulea 'DC150'
A small clumping plant 0.3m(h) x 0.4m(w) with blue strappy leaves and purple and yellow flowers from September to November.
Dianella caerulea 'DCMP01'
A small clumping plant 0.4m(h) x 0.4m(w) with strappy leaves and purple and yellow flowers from September to November.
Dianella caerulea 'DCNCO'
strappy leaved shrub which grows to about 0.7m in diameter with blue and yellow flowers and purple fruit.
Callistemon salignus 'Great Balls of Fire'
Growing to a height of 1.75m with a spread of 1.5m, C. 'Great Balls of Fire' was bred for its particularly dense compact habit and the intense red hues of its new emerging growth.
Callistemon viminalis 'Prolific'
A small tree to 6m high by 4m across with pendulous branch
tips. The leaves are narrowly elliptical to 50mm long by 7mm wide. The
bright red flowers are borne in spikes clustered near the branch ends. Each
spike is about 80mm long by 40mm across. They are seen in late spring and
summer and again in autumn in the eastern states and from June to October
in Western Australia.
Diagnosis:
The only significant differences between this and other forms of
C. viminalis are its prolific flowering habit and the flowering spikes
borne in clusters at the branch ends. The branch ends are not as pendulous
as some forms. It is not readily identifiable.