The prettiest and hardiest of all eucs for the pacific northwest. Survives hard freezes even when very young. Great multi trunked open ha...Read Morebit, blue green leaves with an orange border seen in the direct sun, multi colored trunk, tolerates high wind and snow load, and doesn't grow obnoxiously big. The euc to grow for this area if you can only do one.
It is considered one of the hardiest Eucalypts.It
survived last winter's 10 days below freezing unlike E. gunni....Read Morer />
It has been extremely slow growing. Overall this is one of
Australian plants more likely to survive in the upper Southeast
U.S. It is adapted to sunny well drained poor soil.
Not only the Eucalyptus aren´t south american, but also they are a danger to local forests. Since we haven´t got an adapted fauna to th...Read Moree eucalypti ecosystems, most species propagate and grow fast, and the eucalyptus forests become "green deserts" (no animals live on it, and hardly any other kind of plant can grow there too).
Definitely not from South America. Like 99% of all Eucalypts, this is an Australian species. It is the dominant tree on the top of the so...Read Moreuthern parts of the Great Dividing Range, in Victoria and New South Wales, where it experiences a good snowfall each winter.
I purchased one here in White Rock, BC (south of Vancouver) about 5 years ago. It was 3/4 inch calliper and about 5 ft tall. It is now ab...Read Moreout 20 ft tall and about 10-12" calliper. The "flowers" are white and the resulting pods are more silvery similar to the bark.
Definitely like this one, a breeze to grow. Great year round foliage. Going to try and propagate it soon. Not sure but I believe it is from S. America.
This is one of the smaller, hardier and slower growing eucalypts.
The bark peels to form a grey, green and cream "python's skin" e...Read Moreffect.The leaves are scimitar shaped and an attractive grey green, with red hints.
The tree has a habit of leaning as it grows. This can be used to good effect in the garden.
The prettiest and hardiest of all eucs for the pacific northwest. Survives hard freezes even when very young. Great multi trunked open ha...Read More
It is considered one of the hardiest Eucalypts.It
survived last winter's 10 days below freezing unlike E. gunni....Read More
Not only the Eucalyptus aren´t south american, but also they are a danger to local forests. Since we haven´t got an adapted fauna to th...Read More
Definitely not from South America. Like 99% of all Eucalypts, this is an Australian species. It is the dominant tree on the top of the so...Read More
I purchased one here in White Rock, BC (south of Vancouver) about 5 years ago. It was 3/4 inch calliper and about 5 ft tall. It is now ab...Read More
This is one of the smaller, hardier and slower growing eucalypts.
The bark peels to form a grey, green and cream "python's skin" e...Read More