My first Yanidori Teatree

Asus101

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Here is my first collected tree. Collected from a real estate agency. I got permission and replaced it with another. They were so pleased i have another teatree to collect and also a very very large juniper (trunk we think will be atleast 9").


We sprayed foliage with stress guard, planted it in a mix, first layer large particles, and then a top layer of fines. Sand about 60% to normal organic potting soil. I hope come spring this year to repot into something better.


What do you think?
 

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I'm sorry to hear about the potting soil, but you would be best to live with it for a year or two at least. Having just uprooted this tree, the last thing you should do is re-pot it again in a couple months, give it time to adjust. Although, potting soil may not give you another option.

Get in the habit of keeping a few pond baskets, growing boxes, and/or other containers as well as a supply of good, well draining soil on hand. In this way, whenever you bring a tree home, it can go straight into a container it can stay in for a few years with good soil that will get it through that time.

I like the tree you collected, the bark and trunk has a lot to offer.


Will
 
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Asus101

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I'm sorry to hear about the potting soil, but you would be best to live with it for a year or two at least. Having just uprooted this tree, the last thing you should do is re-pot it again in a couple months, give it time to adjust. Although, potting soil may not give you another option.

Get in the habit of keeping a few pond baskets, growing boxes, and/or other containers as well as a supply of good, well draining soil on hand. In this way, whenever you bring a tree home, it can go straight into a container it can stay in for a few years with good soil that will get it through that time.

I like the tree you collected, the bark and trunk has a lot to offer.


Will

I wanted to put in 100% in-organic mix but, moving house has left funds limited.

Oh there is no back here at all. Thats all bare wood....
 
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Looking closer at this tree, anoither question that comes to mind is...how did you decide this was a leptosermum?



Will
 

Asus101

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Looking closer at this tree, anoither question that comes to mind is...how did you decide this was a leptosermum?



Will

Because of the rough estimate of the gardens planting, and the fact its a common garden plant.

It will grow yellow tips when it puts on new growth.
 

Asus101

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found out what it is, hopes of it surviving are a little higher.

The Fringed Heath Myrtle (Micromyrtus ciliata) is a well-known shrub which will interest every gardener looking for the choicest plants. Graceful in appearance yet tough in constitution, it remains healthy for years with little or no attention. Once established and bushy it stands drought well, but if any branches should die out it regenerates well after watering. However, adequate water ensures more lush and continuous growth and must be given for the first years after planting.

Habit varies from prostrate to upright, and the low forms are specially attractive. With age it may spread over 3 m across, slowly reaching 1 m high with long arching and tapering branches. In a sunny position growth is dense and stiff - an excellent ground cover for keeping down weeds. It is spectacular in a large rockery and lends itself to landscaping design around the walls of buildings as well as to any slope or front of border. This species has the tiniest of leaves and flowers among native garden shrubs, but both are of solid substance for their size, and being massed are effective. Leaves are opposite, an arrangement often seen in shrubs of the family Myrtaceae to which also Paperbarks (Melaleuca) belong. lt gives them a neat and clean appearance at all seasons and thus many are valued as foliage plants apart from their flowering interest. The leaves of all are aromatic when bruised and seldom blemished by pests or diseases.

Towards the end of the winter the shrub brightens to carmine as flower buds with reddish calyces develop. The flowers outline the branches in clusters at the end of short lateral stems, and open first low on the branches. Flowers are cup-shaped with five rounded petals, white or flushed pink or red, often mingled on the same plant.

They age to deeper reds and remain firm for many weeks thus extending the season of colour till the end of November. In some years stray autumn flowers appear.

Good seed is difficult to obtain and propagation is by means of cuttings of stem tips taken when half ripened. Young plants can generally be bought from nurseries and sometimes are offered under separate horticultural names according to habit and colour. When planting out they should be given light soil free from lime and they then grow quickly, coming into flower while young. Pruning is optional and a little light trimming is effected if sprays of flowers are cut for decoration. These are easy to arrange and long-lasting in shallow bowls of water. Sometimes as they dry out slowly such stems will keep enough colour to be useful in dried arrangements.

Based on text by Irene Beeton (1971)
 
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