Page 2 of 2

Re: Which Australian genus do you prefer, or want to grow?

Posted: July 18th, 2016, 7:01 am
by melbrackstone
I think maybe Callitris has no votes because of the question of styling. I think it has potential?
Mike
I'd love to see some affordable stock, up here in Brisbane they're twice the price and more, of the other native plants.

Re: Which Australian genus do you prefer, or want to grow?

Posted: July 18th, 2016, 8:54 am
by Grant Bowie
I would have included Callitris if I had 4 choices.

I am giving a talk in Sydney on Saturday 23rd August for the Bonsai Society of Sydney for their annual show. I will be talking about natives and I will be bringing my Callitris and a starter as part of the talk/demo. Also Banksia of course, plus Leptospermum , Melaleuca and Kunzea.

Grant

Re: Which Australian genus do you prefer, or want to grow?

Posted: July 18th, 2016, 12:08 pm
by kcpoole
So many choices on offer it is really hard to decide.

I have examples of most of the choices, but not you missed out on Water gum :-(
Possibly one of the best of all due to the ability to to reduce leaf size, the foliage and branch colour and the flaking bark :-) Awesome tree :yes:

My choices though were Mel, Kunzea, and Baekea. Fast growth, Flowers in summer, they have small leaves naturally so suited to small trees. Great bark on them too :-)

Ken

Re: Which Australian genus do you prefer, or want to grow?

Posted: July 18th, 2016, 4:16 pm
by Josh
Can I change my vote :palm:
Wish I had 4 votes. Would be interesting to do this again in 12-18 months and see if peoples opinions change as the get used to other varieties. I have some I haven't worked on yet but once I work out how they grow my opinion might change

Re: Which Australian genus do you prefer, or want to grow?

Posted: July 19th, 2016, 11:32 am
by Rory
It is interesting to see that Mels and Eucs lead the pack. This is not what I thought would happen. I thought figs / callistemon or banksia would have been the highest.
kcpoole wrote:I have examples of most of the choices, but not you missed out on Water gum :-(
Possibly one of the best of all due to the ability to to reduce leaf size, the foliage and branch colour and the flaking bark :-) Awesome tree :yes:
Sorry about that. I didn't think it came under common Australian Genera so I excluded it, but perhaps I should have included it.
I tried my hand at these, but they didn't tolerate strong shade so I didn't pursue them myself.
Josh wrote:I have some I haven't worked on yet but once I work out how they grow my opinion might change
hahaha

I think a lot of people would fall under this category too.