Grow these natives over exotic plants this Autumn | Australian native plants | Gardening Australia

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  • Опубликовано: 1 мар 2024
  • Autumn’s cooler weather can bring some glorious colour to gardens, but don’t limit your choices to maple trees and other exotics - there are plenty of native plants that can spice up your garden, too. Clarence suggests a few to grow. Subscribe 🔔 ab.co/GA-subscribe
    Hairpin Banksia - has tall spires of yellow with intricate details that look lovely and attract lots of birds. Normally a tall shrub or small tree, there are several cultivars available with different flower tones and varying plant sizes, including the compact ‘Birthday Candles’, which only grows 50cm tall and 1m across.
    Suited to cool to subtropical climates, it grows in full sun or part shade. Prune after flowering, or simply cut those glorious flowers for a vase to keep compact.
    Grevillea ‘Bush Lemons’ - bright yellow flower spikes against fine, grey-green, feathery foliage make a lovely contrast on this fast-growing, large shrub, which reaches about 3m x 3m. Prune after flowering. Grows in most well-drained soils from sub-tropical to cool climates, and like a sunny spot, or light shade. A feed of native-suitable fertiliser in spring will keep it flourishing.
    Diamond-leaf pittosporum - this is one of several Australian rainforest trees that produce colourful berries in autumn. After heavily perfumed white flowers in summer, this plant is covered with clusters of golden yellow berries. Native to Queensland, it suits warm-temperate to sub-tropical climates. While it can reach 25m in a rainforest situation, it is smaller in cultivation - usually between 10-15m. Not to be confused with the weedy Pittosporum undulatum.
    Angophora costata - a large tree from coastal NSW and Qld, where it’s widely grown in parks and as a street tree. There are large, showy white flowers in summer but in autumn the gorgeous bark comes into its own. The old bark is shed in spring, revealing a gorgeous, smooth salmon pink, which is a dramatic feature in any garden.
    Paper daisies - a beautiful plant that flowers for most of the year in a range of colours from pink, red and purple to yellow, cream and white. The first flush of flowers is in spring but the papery, everlasting blooms last right through until autumn. They are fast-growing plants up to 1m tall, easily raised from seed and, depending on the climate, can be a annual, biennial or a short-lived perennial. They like well-drained soils and grow well in pots. Cut flowers for the vase to keep plants compact.
    Kangaroo grass - some plants set seed in autumn and have seed heads that are just as colourful and interesting as flowers. Kangaroo grass is one of them. Its architectural seedheads are very distinctive and the whole plant takes on a reddish-bronze hue in autumn that looks superb en masse. It is found across the country, but regional forms can vary, so source seed or plants from a local supplier to get a form suited to your soil and climate. It grows in full sun to part shade and in all soil types, although it responds well to extra moisture in summer. Cut back in autumn, rake out old leaves, and enjoy its bright green, new leaves in spring.
    Featured plants:
    Hairpin Banksia (Banksia spinulosa ‘Yellow Wing’)
    Grevillea (Grevillea ‘Bush Lemons’)
    Diamond-leaf Pittosporum (Auranticarpa rhombifolia)
    Smooth-barked apple (Angophora costata)
    Paper Daisy (Xerochrysum cv.)
    Kangaroo Grass (Themeda triandra)
    Filmed on Boon Wurrung & Bunurong Country in Cranbourne, Vic
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Комментарии • 17

  • @charlie-jay
    @charlie-jay 4 месяца назад +6

    0:33 Looks like Cranbourne is now a suburb of Sydney.😉

  • @katesmiles4208
    @katesmiles4208 4 месяца назад +10

    Has anyone else bought a native aussie finger lime a couple of years ago? Still no fruit for mine ... im starting to think i just bought an expensive prickly bush 🤣😄

    • @ausfoodgarden
      @ausfoodgarden 4 месяца назад +4

      If it's a grafted one, they usually start fruiting in the third year and increase fruit numbers each year after.
      If it was a straight seedling, they can take many years to start fruiting, you might need a lot of patience.😊

    • @HGCUPCAKES
      @HGCUPCAKES 4 месяца назад +1

      You have!
      It’s a con. You’re listening to a paid propaganda show that’s against white civilisation.
      Of course that’s why your bush is just that.

    • @paulm8084
      @paulm8084 3 месяца назад

      patience young grasshopper

    • @jirhoud
      @jirhoud 2 месяца назад

      mine first fruited this year, about three or four years old. still small, but have three fruits on the tree.

  • @jaccobm
    @jaccobm 3 месяца назад +2

    When did Cranbourne move to NSW?

  • @cheaputhyvan4705
    @cheaputhyvan4705 4 месяца назад +1

    🏞️🥦🦋

  • @Plantandpeoplecarer
    @Plantandpeoplecarer 4 месяца назад +4

    Gorgeous but all way too big for most yards in Australia! We have some of the smallest blocks in the world!

    • @Safari2009ify
      @Safari2009ify 4 месяца назад

      I agree! 🇦🇺

    • @L_MD_
      @L_MD_ 4 месяца назад +1

      Really? I live in QLD we have quarter of an acre blocks here.

    • @zappy7393
      @zappy7393 4 месяца назад

      @@L_MD_Yep...they must be in Syd or Vic... most of their yards are concrete or 3x3m.

    • @HGCUPCAKES
      @HGCUPCAKES 4 месяца назад +2

      @@L_MD_because QLD is like the entirety of Australia 😂

  • @HGCUPCAKES
    @HGCUPCAKES 4 месяца назад +2

    Or we can just let people put in their gardens what they like and not be judged for it or dictated to by the industry.

    • @GardeningAustralia
      @GardeningAustralia  3 месяца назад +7

      We love all plants at Gardening Australia! As we are an Australian gardening show, we would be remiss if we didn't highlight the beautiful native plants in our country!

    • @gigglesmcgee2052
      @gigglesmcgee2052 3 месяца назад +3

      It helps the native ecosystem and shouldn't be politically motivated.

    • @jirhoud
      @jirhoud 2 месяца назад +1

      the judgment is in your head.