Clustered Everlasting Indigenous Plants for Ballarat Gardens

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Clustered Everlasting Indigenous Plants for Ballarat Gardens GROUNDCOVER Indigenous Plants for Ballarat Gardens Clustered Everlasting Chrysocephalum semipapposum FAST FACTS An Australian native from the Ballarat area, planted in a hole not much larger than the Groundcover Clustered Everlasting (Chrysocephalum pot within a few days of purchase. Give it a Family: Asteraceae semipapposum ) is a sprawling plant up to good ½ bucket of water as soon as you Daisy 40cm high and 60cm wide. plant it and it should be fine after that. Size: 40cm H x 60cm W Location : Clustered Everlasting likes full Care : When the Clustered Everlasting Position: Full sun sun and displays its golden yellow flowers starts to look a bit straggly after flowering, Soil: Dry over many months. It looks good in a bed give it a really big prune right back to within Flowers: Spring – Autumn of mixed indigenous and garden plants. about 20cm of the base. It will form a nice Fruits: Inconspicuous small silvery clump of leaves until the flower Care: Prune Try Clustered Everlasting where most other stems grow again next year. plants will struggle, as apart from a yearly prune, it doesn’t need much care at all. It is Seed : When you prune you might like to also good for covering the ground and leave some of the flower stems uncut until keeping weeds out. they form papery grey seeds. These can be collected or let blow away in the breeze. Flowers : The flowers are fairly small, bright yellow daisies clustered at the ends of long, Alternatively, if you lay some of the cut slightly floppy, grey stems. They look quite stems in a shallow trough and cover them stunning against the silvery-grey leaves. with soil, leaving about 10cm at both ends exposed, you may find that some of the Planting : Clustered Everlasting are quite stems will grow into new plants. tough and will grow well in your garden if For further information contact Environmental and Conservation Science, Federation University Australia. www. federation.edu.au/ipbg .
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