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[SYANBS] Melaleuca Linariifolia

Posted: June 16th, 2024, 2:23 pm
by Kedron Brook
Entering 4 species. The first photos will all be identical. All seeds were ordered from Living Green & Feeling Seedy, and arrived promptly. They were not float tested, as each packet has at least 100 seeds (excluding the Ficus Brachypoda).

I will probably use half the seeds now and half at the start of August. The Brisbane winter here is typically 10-20c and so maybe the heat tray is unnecessary. The time from germination until shooting is 1 month. The tray was filled with a seed-raising soil mix from Yates. The seeds were sprinkled atop, then lightly brushed with fingers to turn the soil. Then I sprayed with a fine mist until quite wet. This tray is on a seed warming mat and the vents are open. I have some caution about the chances of mold in this tray and migrating the seedlings from the tray to their own containers in late winter. They will be in direct morning sunlight until midday and then heavy shade until nightfall.

Melaleuca Linariifolia will also have long term aims. The wild ones I like the most have mostly straight trunks and the branches begin to go all wibbly wobbly. So to recreate that, a larger tree is needed. It is not obvious to me how dense the foliage can be, although seeing several of my collection recover from possum attack shows they can be momentarily dense.

Re: [SYANBS] Melaleuca Linariifolia

Posted: August 30th, 2025, 9:28 am
by Kedron Brook
During the seed stage, there was a lot of rain (prior to Tropical Storm Alfred). This flooded my seed trays and mixed things altogether. I chose these as Linariifolia because the leaves seem slightly larger and lighter. The very young bark is also pale and rougher on these.

I potted up several Melaleuca. Unfortunately during a little holiday at Noosa, a well-meaning relative decided that the ground was too wet, and turned off the irrigation. Most of the stress was to larger Mels. Anyway a few of the smaller ones dried up, and there's one which I didn't photograph and is inching towards the green bin lid.

They were repotted about March and are all ready for another up-pot. The heat of summer is already being felt around Brissie and there are many other tasks. If it seems right I will up-pot soon but that may be delayed until March 2026.

1 has a quite dramatic shape. The other does not. The straighter one shows the evidence of drought in my opinion. The trunk / branches are mostly bare until a certain height where there are many, many shoots. All the photos of mels are after a minor trim.