Correa 'Bett's Red'
It is a large open shrub growing to a height of about 1.5m by
about 2m wide. The leaves are up to 20mm long by about 10mm wide. The upper
surface is rough to the touch while the underside is rusty to light green
in colour and covered with matted woolly hairs. The younger stems are also
rough. The deep pink flowers are tubular and 35mm long. The colour is
slightly paler at the tips. The tips of the floral tube are partially
reflexed. The style and stamens protrude about 5mm beyond the rim of the
floral tube. It is reported to flower freely from March to October.
Diagnosis:
This cultivar is different from its assumed parents in size of
plant, flower colour and roughness of leaves, stems and flowers. Correa
'Bett's Red', growing to a height of about 1.5m, is larger than Correa
'Mannii' which usually grows up to 500mm. Correa'Bett's Red' has darker
pink flowers than Correa 'Mannii' and the roughness of the leaves, stems
and flowers of Correa 'Bett's Red' is much greater that shown by Correa
'Mannii'. Correa 'Bett's Red' is different from Correa reflexa in flower
colour and shape of the floral tube. Correa 'Bett's Red' has deep pink
flowers compared with red and/or green for Correa reflexa. The floral tube
also does not reflex to the same extent usually seen in Correa reflexa.
Correa reflexa var. speciosa 'Fat Fred'
This cultivar is a very large flowered form of the species.
The flowers are quite squat, measuring plus/minus 30mm overall by
plus/minus 13mm in diameter. The upper part of the corolla tube is red
while the tips are a clear green yellow. All other characteristics of the
cultivar fit within the known range of variation of C. reflexa var.
speciosa.
Diagnosis:
The cultivar can be distinguished by its very large flowers.
Correa 'Betty Fawcett'
The cultivar is a medium dense shrub that grows to 1.0m x 2m.
The foliage is dark green. The flowers are pink and yellow to 25mm long by
8mm wide. It flowers in Autumn and Spring.
Diagnosis:
This cultivar is very similar to Correa 'Marian's Marvel'. The
flowers are very similar though Correa 'Marion's Marvel' has more area of
yellow at the base of the bell. The foliage also differs somewhat, with the
leaves of Correa 'Betty Fawcett' having deep indentations where the leaves
occur on the leaf blade.
Correa 'Marian's Marvel'
This cultivar is an open shrub from 1-2m tall by up to 3m
across. The stems are long and spreading and ascendant at the ends. Older
stems are glabrous though younger stems are densely covered in pale to dark
brown stellate hairs. The leaves are cordate with simple margins, an obtuse
apex and up to 3cm long by 2cm wide. They are glabrous and shiny above and
densely covered in pale to dark brown stellate hairs. The leaves are
cordate with simple margins, an obtuse apex and up to 3cm long by 2cm wide.
They are glabrous and shiny above and densely covered with pale to rusty
stellate hairs on the underside. The flowers are tubular, up to 3cm long by
1cm wide and found from March to September. These are found in groups of
one to three per axil, are pink with creamy green tips and covered with
fine stellate hairs. The calyx lobes are not reflexed and the stamens are
exserted.
Diagnosis:
1-2m, up to 3m. Leaves cordate; 3cm long, 2cm wide, glabrous
above, rusty hairy below. Flowers tubular, 3cm long, slightly reflexed,
pink/creamy green.
Correa 'Dusky Bells'
Note:
Originally Correa 'Pink Bells'
Correa 'Dusky Bells' is an extremely compact and very dense
shrub, rarely exceeding 0.6m in height. In more sheltered situations plants
may grow marginally taller. Plants can spread form 2 to 4m across. Leaves
vary considerably in size, from 10 to 40mm long by 5 to 20mm in width. They
are elliptic to lanceolate or ovate in shape. The leaf apex is usually
obtuse but can be emarginate. They are a dull green above and lighter green
below. Both surfaces of the leaves have white stellate hairs when young but
these hairs are practically absent on the upper surface of the older
leaves. The uppermost part of the stems and branchlets are covered in brown
stellate hairs. The tubular flowers are solitary and axillary. The exterior
of the corolla is a pale carmine pink. The corolla is from 25 to 40mm in
length. The outer surface of the corolla is densely covered in stellate
hairs while the inner surface is free of hairs. The flowering period is
from March to September though occasional flowers may be found at other
times of the year.
Diagnosis:
This cultivar is easily distinguished by its dense compact
habit, the distinctive foliage and the colour of its flowers.
Notes:
(1) From information provided by the applicant. (2) Boddy's Nursery
Catalogue 1967 p. 53.
Correa 'Mannii'
This cultivar is a small to medium shrub which grows from
between 0.6m to 1.5m tall (but when scrambling up through other shrubs has
been known to attain a height of 2.5m) and from 2 to 3m across. It is a
much branched open shrub with long arching branches and with long internode
spaces, but is more compact in an open situation. The leaves are dark green
and glabrous on the upper surface and paler green and almost glabrous on
the lower surface. The leaf shape is cordate with an obtuse apex and they
vary considerably in size. The larger leaves are up to 3cm long by 2cm
wide. The flowers are tubular and up to 4cm long by 1cm across. The flowers
are a vivid red on the exterior and a paler pink inside. The perianth has
reflexed tips. The flowering season varies from spring, autumn to winter
and autumn to summer. The main flowering season in Canberra is the cooler
months, especially from April to July. In Melbourne it occurs from April to
August. Flowering often continues intermittently between the main bursts.
Diagnosis:
The cultivar differs markedly from the purported parents and can
be distinguished by the flower colour alone. Correa 'Mannii' has been
confused in the past with Correa 'Dusky Bells', a hybrid believed to be of
the same parentage, but there is no logical reason for this confusion at
all because the plants are quite different in general morphology, foliage
and flower colour. Correa 'Mannii' has glabrous leaves and strongly
reflexed perianth tips while Correa 'Bett's Red' has scabrous upper surface
of the leaves and partially reflexed perianth lobes. Correa 'Bett's Red'
also has dark pink flowers while Correa 'Mannii' is red.
Correa reflexa var. reflexa 'Icicle'
Low-growing shrub to ca. 40 cm x 30 cm with a dense habit.
Corolla cylindrical 35 mm x 10 mm, cream
with a pale pink flush at the base and a 1cm band of pale green near the
tips.
Peak flowering is from March to June in most districts.
Diagnosis:
This cultivar conforms to descriptions for C. reflexa var.
reflexa found naturally in the Portland area but is distinctive by its
unique flower colour. Two colour forms occur commonly in the Portland area,
bright red with green tips or uniformly green. Other natural variants occur
and 'Icicle' is a colour selection from wild sources. There are very few
cream forms of C. reflexa in the trade, the most common form available
being red with green tips.
Eucryphia lucida 'Ballerina'
The general morphology of the cultivar is as for the species,
but the flower size, at 3cm, is towards the larger end of those recorded
for the species. The flowers are shaded from very pale pink inside to
darker pink edges with crimson stamens.
Diagnosis:
The colour of the flowers is similar to those of E. lucida
'Pink Cloud', but the stamens are crimson, giving the appearance of a
crimson centre.
Grevillea 'Pink Surprise'
Leaves are compound and shiny green on the upper surface. Each
leaf consists of + 20 long narrow lobes, occasionally these being
subdivided into two. Some lobes end in a small hooked point, others in a
straight point. The overall length of a leaf is + 30cm and the width +
10cm. Individual lobes are about 10cm long and 2-4mm wide. The leaf edges
are rolled under. Flowers are pink with long cream to very pale green
styles. Flowers are about 15cm long and approximately 5cm wideand produced
in dense terminal racemes. Individual flowers are borne in tight pairs and
are woolly. Perianth tube and limb together measure about 1.3cm long,
styles are up to 3.5 cm long.
Diagnosis:
G. 'Pink Surprise' can be distinguished from its parents by its
pink flower colour
Callistemon pachyphyllus 'Smoked Salmon'
In cultivation the cultivar is slightly more compact than the
type and attains a height of 1.5m. All morphological characteristics of the
cultivar are as for C. pachyphyllus. The flowers are a salmony pink to
shell pink in colour and are plus/minus 8cm long by plus/minus 6cm wide. It
is stated that in Brisbane this cultivar has some flowers for most of the
year with two main flowering peaks, in summer and from autumn to early
winter. The flowers during the summer months are slightly paler in colour.
Diagnosis:
The cultivar differs from the normal red and green flowering
forms of C. pachyphyllus in the salmon pink to shell pink colour of its
flowers.