Melaleuca armillaris Bracelet HoneyMyrtle seeds X 200 Ole Lantana’s Seed Store

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Melaleuca armillaris Bracelet Honey Myrtle, Giant Honey Myrtle information & photos

Description Bracelet honey myrtle ranges from a large shrub to a small weeping tree growing to 8 m (30 ft) in height. It has rough, grey fibrous bark, distinctive decumbent branching and dense foliage. Fast-growing and free-flowering, Melaleuca armillaris (Bracelet Honey Myrtle) is a large bushy evergreen shrub or small tree with soft, needlelike, glossy light green leaves, 1 in. long (2.5 cm). In spring and summer, the plant is covered with dense spikes of cream to white flowers that resemble bottlebrushes. To Plant Database Melaleuca armillaris, image Alan Fairley Family: Myrtaceae A large shrub or small tree to 8 metres high with hard to corky fibrous bark. It has a mostly coastal occurrence in NSW, growing from the NSW south coast and Victorian-border, north to Port Macquarie, extending west to the Blue Mountains and Southern Tablelands. Melaleuca armillaris, commonly known as bracelet honey myrtle, is a plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae, and is native to South Australia, Victoria and Tasmania in south-eastern Australia. It is a hardy, commonly grown species, often used as a fast-growing screen plant, but it also has the potential to become a weed.

Bracelet Honey Myrtle in Kenya

Common name: Bracelet Honey-myrtle Melaleuca armillaris (Sol. ex Gaertn.) Sm. APNI* Description: Shrub to 5 m high with hard or corky bark. Leaves alternate, linear, 12-25 mm long, c. 1 mm wide, apex recurved, acute, glabrous; petiole 1-2 mm long. Bracelet Honey-myrtle. Melaleuca armillaris ssp. armillaris. Trees and Shrubs. South Australia Region : This vigorous species from south-eastern Australia is one of the most widely cultivated Melaleucas available. With light green, narrow leaves and white, bottlebrush-like flowers, it grows into a large spreading shrub or small tree to 8 m. "Bracelet Honey Myrtle" SHRUB OR SMALL TREE TO 5 METRES TALL Rounded spreading habit, linear leaves & pure white or sometimes pink bottlebrush flowers to 6cm long. Attractive to birds and bees. Distribution: North Coast, Central Coast, South Coast, Central Tablelands, Southern Tablelands, Victoria, Tasmania, Tasmania

Image of Melaleuca Armillaris (Bracelet Honey Myrtle) leaves and background Austockphoto

Description: Small wide spreading tree with fine narrow foliage and white flowers in spring/summer with hard or corky bark. Many-flowered dense spikes borne low on the branchlets. Fruit short and cylindrical. Can be pruned to a single trunk. Accepted Name. Source. Melaleuca armillaris ( Sol. ex Gaertn.) Sm. APC. According to: CHAH (2010), Australian Plant Census. Published in: Smith, J.E (1797), Botanical Characters of Some Plants of the Natural Order of Myrti. Transactions of the Linnean Society of London 3. Synonym. Bracelet Honey-myrtle is a large and fast-growing evergreen bushy shrub. When left unrestrained in a natural setting it may also become a small tree, reaching up to 5m high. It has hard corky bark that tends to peel in characteristic strips. 5 seedlings Maximum Purchase: 400 seedlings Description Specifications Melaleuca armillaris or bracelet honey myrtle is one of the most commonly planted of all the melaleucas. Back in the 1970's during the Whitlam era Australians became very conscious of their national identity.

Image of Melaleuca Armillaris (Bracelet Honey Myrtle) bushes and leaves Austockphoto

Bracelet Honey Myrtle is a large, perennial, evergreen shrub to 5 m high with hard or corky bark. The leaves are alternate, somewhat leathery, linear, more or less flat, 12-25 mm long and 1 mm wide. The white (rarely pink) flowers are densely clustered into cylindric spikes 30-70 mm long. $4.45 The rare pink form of our native bracelet honey myrtle, a pretty shrub for cooler exposed sites and coastal gardens. It's a great windbreak, shelter from sea spray, wildlife hedge, and street tree, as it doesn't get too tall. Subscribe to back in stock notification We can't ship this product to South Australia, Tasmania, Western Australia.