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#1
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lime tolerant grevillea's ?
Hi
does any one know of grevillea's that will cope with a lot of lime stone, have only 300mm -500mm top soil, then we have a solid limestone plate. I bring in as much mulch as I can, but we live in Milang SA so also have a problem with low rain fall. not the ideal place for a gardener. I use my grey water and lots of natives do survive, not tree's, nothing to keep them in the ground on a windy day, so need to stick to shrubs. I really like the native birds in the garden and grevillea's are some of the nicest shrubs about. Any idea's regards Ann |
#2
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lime tolerant grevillea's ?
Ann you best answer for this would be the Australian Plants web site;
magnificent for information on native flora! You can post your question here and have experts do the research http://www.whitepage.com.au/gumnuts/ Cheers, Pete PS Will be travelling down there in a couple of days from Western Sydney (to Robe actually) "robertson" wrote in message ... Hi does any one know of grevillea's that will cope with a lot of lime stone, have only 300mm -500mm top soil, then we have a solid limestone plate. I bring in as much mulch as I can, but we live in Milang SA so also have a problem with low rain fall. not the ideal place for a gardener. I use my grey water and lots of natives do survive, not tree's, nothing to keep them in the ground on a windy day, so need to stick to shrubs. I really like the native birds in the garden and grevillea's are some of the nicest shrubs about. Any idea's regards Ann |
#3
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lime tolerant grevillea's ?
In article ,
"robertson" wrote: does any one know of grevillea's that will cope with a lot of lime stone, have only 300mm -500mm top soil, then we have a solid limestone plate. I bring in as much mulch as I can, but we live in Milang SA so also have a problem with low rain fall. not the ideal place for a gardener. I use my grey water and lots of natives do survive, not tree's, nothing to keep them in the ground on a windy day, so need to stick to shrubs. I really like the native birds in the garden and grevillea's are some of the nicest shrubs about. Whew! That IS tough! I would be building up my garden beds as much as possible and going for local grevilleas (if any) or perhaps Western Australian ones. But also consider Eremophilas, and plants with small flowers. Grevilleas with large showy flowers attract the large birds, not the smaller ones. WHat's the local flora like? Tough as old boots, probably. -- Chookie -- Sydney, Australia (Replace "foulspambegone" with "optushome" to reply) "Parenthood is like the modern stone washing process for denim jeans. You may start out crisp, neat and tough, but you end up pale, limp and wrinkled." Kerry Cue |
#4
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lime tolerant grevillea's ?
I believe that large parts of Adelaide are on a heavy limestone soil,
so you could get a book talking about the native flora of Adelaide and see from there what is, and isn't, limestone-tolerant. Presumably the Adelaide botanic gardens would also have relevant information. Tish On Tue, 26 Sep 2006 22:16:41 +1000, Chookie wrote: In article , "robertson" wrote: does any one know of grevillea's that will cope with a lot of lime stone, have only 300mm -500mm top soil, then we have a solid limestone plate. I bring in as much mulch as I can, but we live in Milang SA so also have a problem with low rain fall. not the ideal place for a gardener. I use my grey water and lots of natives do survive, not tree's, nothing to keep them in the ground on a windy day, so need to stick to shrubs. I really like the native birds in the garden and grevillea's are some of the nicest shrubs about. Whew! That IS tough! I would be building up my garden beds as much as possible and going for local grevilleas (if any) or perhaps Western Australian ones. But also consider Eremophilas, and plants with small flowers. Grevilleas with large showy flowers attract the large birds, not the smaller ones. WHat's the local flora like? Tough as old boots, probably. |
#5
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lime tolerant grevillea's ?
robertson wrote:
Hi does any one know of grevillea's that will cope with a lot of lime stone, have only 300mm -500mm top soil, then we have a solid limestone plate. I bring in as much mulch as I can, but we live in Milang SA so also have a problem with low rain fall. not the ideal place for a gardener. I use my grey water and lots of natives do survive, not tree's, nothing to keep them in the ground on a windy day, so need to stick to shrubs. I really like the native birds in the garden and grevillea's are some of the nicest shrubs about. Any idea's regards Ann A Google search for "lime tolerant grevilleas" brings up over 800 pages on the subject, you should be able to find what you need there. |
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