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#1
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Drought resistant plants
I've noticed a lot of trees and shrubs starting to die around Sydney as a result
of the drought. Interestingly, the plants that are dying first are natives. Eucalypts, Lilli Pilli, Grevillea, Callistemon, Wattle are dying in their hundreds. Bamboo is also dying off (hooray!). Plants like Camellias, deciduous trees, bouganvillea and conifers seem to be handling the lack of water. Is the same thing happening elsewhere? |
#2
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Drought resistant plants
"Darren Wilson" wrote in message
... I've noticed a lot of trees and shrubs starting to die around Sydney as a result of the drought. Interestingly, the plants that are dying first are natives. Eucalypts, Lilli Pilli, Grevillea, Callistemon, Wattle are dying in their hundreds. Bamboo is also dying off (hooray!). Plants like Camellias, deciduous trees, bouganvillea and conifers seem to be handling the lack of water. Is the same thing happening elsewhere? Here on the Mid-North Coast, I would have to say yes, seems to be the same. Some of the natives at work are starting to look a little worse for wear, and naturally there does seem to be a few of the same you mention dying off. Even in peoples yards it seems similar. While one I have noticed that seems to be doing well around the place, is Camellias. Murrayas also seem to be surviving quite well. Perhaps they naturally have a much deeper root system? -- Remove "not" from start of email address to reply |
#3
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Drought resistant plants
"Darren Wilson" wrote in message ... I've noticed a lot of trees and shrubs starting to die around Sydney as a result of the drought. Interestingly, the plants that are dying first are natives. Eucalypts, Lilli Pilli, Grevillea, Callistemon, Wattle are dying in their hundreds. Bamboo is also dying off (hooray!). Plants like Camellias, deciduous trees, bouganvillea and conifers seem to be handling the lack of water. Is the same thing happening elsewhere? Some ideas, no real answers. I'm just guessing, but how damaged a deciduous tree is by low rainful should partly depend on what part of their growth cycle the drought occurs in. I know that after a hot dry summer, the Celtis street trees go dormant earlier. If stress is going to kill a tree it often does it slowly, the tree dies a year or 2 after the stress. Also, it is likelly the natives were planted by people who didn't want to do any watering, whereas the people who planted exotics are acutelly aware of the lack of rain and have given the exotics a bit of water at times since rainfall started to reduce, even if only once every few weeks. Some of the plants that are dying off may be biologically constructed to die off then reshoot from the roots in times of stress. Or they may be designed to do a last ditch production of seed then die.... wattles might be like this as a lot of wattles are short lived anyway. |
#4
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Drought resistant plants
Darren Wilson wrote:
I've noticed a lot of trees and shrubs starting to die around Sydney as a result of the drought. Interestingly, the plants that are dying first are natives. Eucalypts, Lilli Pilli, Grevillea, Callistemon, Wattle are dying in their hundreds. Bamboo is also dying off (hooray!). Plants like Camellias, deciduous trees, bouganvillea and conifers seem to be handling the lack of water. Is the same thing happening elsewhere? My wattle are still looking healthy. Same with the grevillea's. But, like you said, The camellia's are loving the dry spell....{south Sydney} -- Compromise, conformity, assimilation, submission, hypocrisy, brutality, the elite.... All of which are American dreams...... |
#5
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Drought resistant plants
Hmm... to save water I tried passing water on the plants after my daily beer
guzzle. I thought it would help... evidently not hahaha |
#6
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Drought resistant plants
On Wed, 27 Nov 2002 14:39:27 GMT, "S. McLaren" wrote:
Hmm... to save water I tried passing water on the plants after my daily beer guzzle. I thought it would help... evidently not Actually, peeing on plants is very good for them. Urine contains urea, an excellent fertilizer. |
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