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NOT a Chamelaucium uncinatum
Posted: October 25th, 2017, 4:27 pm
by Ray M
Hi Folks,
Sorry I wasn't able to post this under Australian Natives, there is no heading for this particular species. They come under the Myrtle family. I have had this tree for some time now and this is the first time I've seen so many flowers. There is a mate planted beside it as well. That one is a Melaleuca. Both trees are in colanders planted in the ground. They both have substantial bases to their trunks, they would both be in excess of 150mm. After flowering I intend pulling them out of the ground and looking at where to go with them.
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Regards Ray
Re: Chamelaucium uncinatum
Posted: October 25th, 2017, 4:57 pm
by shibui
Hi Ray. Those are really great flowers but they look far more like Leptospermum than Chamelaucium to me. There has been a range of these pink and reddish flowered varieties released in the last 10 or so years. Flowers are similar in general shape but you should find differences when you compare. Leaves are also different.
The good news is that Leptospermum are much more hardy here on the East coast. Chamelaucium tend to just drop dead in humid summers over this side.
Re: Chamelaucium uncinatum
Posted: October 25th, 2017, 5:36 pm
by Ray M
shibui wrote:Hi Ray. Those are really great flowers but they look far more like Leptospermum than Chamelaucium to me. There has been a range of these pink and reddish flowered varieties released in the last 10 or so years. Flowers are similar in general shape but you should find differences when you compare. Leaves are also different.
The good news is that Leptospermum are much more hardy here on the East coast. Chamelaucium tend to just drop dead in humid summers over this side.
Hi shibui,
Thanks for the heads up mate. I suspect you are correct. I'll do some comparisons, but I suspect your right.
Thanks again for the info.
Regards Ray
Re: Chamelaucium uncinatum
Posted: October 26th, 2017, 3:07 pm
by Ray M
Hi Folks,
After shibui's post I have done some research. The tree IS NOT a Chamelaucium uncinatum, it is a Leptospermum. Thanks again mate for pointing this out.
The following photos should help to show the differences between the two. The flowers look very similar, but the leaves tell the story.
Chamelaucium uncinatum
Geralton Wax flower.jpg
Geralton Wax.jpg
Leptospermum
Leptospermum flower.jpg
Leptospermum.jpg
Regards Ray
Re: Chamelaucium uncinatum
Posted: October 26th, 2017, 9:01 pm
by Boics
Well done Ray/Shibui.
Looking forward to seeing your work with these Ray.
Love the flowers!