Dianella caerulea 'Goddess'
A large strappy leaved clumping perennial with mid green foliage, growing to a metre tall.
Dianella caerulea 'John 316'
Upright plant with flax-like leaves to 60 cms high. Flowers are blue with yellow anthers on spikes to one metre high with blue-purple fruit.
Dianella revoluta 'Allyn-Citation'
Clump-forming, evergreen perennial which grows to 0.4m(h) x 0.5m(w) with strappy, grey-green leaves and blue to purple-blue and yellow flowers in Summer.
Dianella revoluta 'DR5000'
Dense strappy leafed shrub 0.4m(h) x 0.4m(w) with small purple flowers from October to November.
Dianella revoluta 'DRG04'
Dense strappy leafed shrub 0.5m(h) x 1m(w) with contrasting upper and lower side leaf colour.
Callistemon citrinus 'Demesne Rowena'
This cultivar grows to 1.5m tall by 1.5m wide. It has a fairly
open habit. The flowers open to a deep red and lighten as they age to a
deep pink. Other features of the plant are as for C. citrinus.
Diagnosis:
The cultivar is another very attractive colour variant of C.
citrinus. The flower colour changing from red to deep pink is a very
distinctive feature of the cultivar as compared to the deep crimson of C
'Splendens' and the white flowers of C. 'White Anzac'.
Callistemon citrinus 'Splendens'
Note:
Formerly Callistemon 'Endeavour'
A rounded, compact shrub to 2m high by 2m across sometimes
taller in ideal conditions. Leaves are lanceolate elliptical, 90mm long by
20mm wide. They young growth which emerges from the flower spike is pinkish
and slightly hairy. The mature leaves are glabrous. The brilliant red
flowers are borne prolifically in spikes to 12cm long by 7cm diameter. They
are at their peak in late spring but are seen in other seasons in temperate
areas.
Diagnosis:
The cultivar may be distinguished from other forms of C.
citrinus by its very large, well displayed flower spikes and its compact
habit.
SYNONYMS:C. citrinus var. splendens; C. citrinus 'Endeavour'; C. 'Endeavour'
Callistemon 'Kempsey'
This cultivar is a tall erect shrub to 4m tall by up to 2m
across. The bark is semi-papery. The leaves are narrow lanceolate and 65mm
long by 6mm wide. The flowers are a bright red in colour and are borne in
densely packed terminal racemes in spring and summer.
Diagnosis:
This cultivar is more erect than either of the parent species.
The flowers are also held more erect and larger than the parent species.
The new leaf growth is not red.