Marble Gum
Desert Star Flower
Coolibah (or Coolabah)
Large Fruited Mallee
Rough-leaved Ghost Gum
River Red Gum
Square-fruit Mallee, Four-winged Mallee
Bell-fruited Mallee
Albany or Swamp Daisy
Desert Heath Myrtle
Cajeput Tree, Paperbark
Verticordia pennigera
Mottlecah
Weeping Gum, Weeping Mallee
Esperance Wax
Cross-leaf Honey-Myrtle
Bloodwood
One sided bottlebrush
Flat Topped Yate
Tallerack
Open shrub. Leaves small and slightly compressed. Flowers small, in pairs, white when young turning red with age. Curved styles extended beyond the petals.
A small to medium shrub with extremely small leaves and pink to purple star shaped flowers.
Small tree with rough scaly tessellated bark over the trunk and branches. Leaves are the same colour on both faces with no intramarginal vein. Buds are arranged in dense terminal panicles.
Small bush, about 60cm high. Both colours of flowers originate from same stem - they are parts of the same flower.
Erect or prostrate shrub, 0.2 to 0.6 m high. Fl. pink, Jan or Mar to Apr or Jul or Sep to Dec. Sandy or clay, often gravelly soils. Often associated with granitic rocks.
Straggling low shrub to about 1m. Branches covered with thick ridged corky grey bark. Pinkish-mauve flowers produced directly on woody stems. Grows in sandy areas
Common. A small gum with distinctive waxy-white (glaucous) foliage and gumnuts (fruit). Grows to about 4m tall. Branches and fruits have 4 angular ribs running longitudinally. Gumnuts 1cm long.
Shrub, 0.3-2.4 m high. Fl. pink-purple/white, Jul to Nov. Sandy, often gravelly soils over granite or laterite. Associated with granite rocks or watercourses.
A small compact bush with masses of small, white flowers. Growing in gravelly/sandy soil.
A small shrub to 50cm with small almost succulent leaves. Growing in sandy or gravelly soil in heathland. Common in places.
Staggly small mallee to 3m. Leaves thick, about 15cm long. Large square ribbed, bright red flower base. Anthers bright pink. Operculum (bud cap) is pointed and ribbed.
Smelling sweet ,Tea Tree blossoms blowing like confetti in the wind line the roads of Flinders Island.
A small tree with rough box-type bark. Adult leaves retain their juvenile form, they are large about 15x8cm, waxy-grey (glaucous) and the same colour on both sides, opposite and sessile.
Smooth white bark and rough almost sandpaper-textured leaves are distinctive features of this beautiful tree of desert areas. The mature crown of these trees is made up of juvenile-type leaves that
Spreading shrub, 0.3-2.5 m high with small ovate shaped leaves crowded along the stems. Flowers are orange, approx 15mm across and are at the end of the stems.
Flowers of this small shrub are a combination of white-pink-red.
Erect to spreading shrub, 0.3-1.4 m high. Fl. white-pink, Aug to Oct. Grey or yellow sand, lateritic gravel. Sandplains, ridges, lateritic rises.
Mallee to 5m, somewhat tumbledown habit. Bark rough on lower branches, smooth above. Leaves grey-green, broad and sessile (without a leaf stalk) and arranged in opposite pairs. Buds with conical cap,
One of only two 'true' bottlebrushes in WA. Tall to small tree or shrub, 1-6 m high. Fl. red, Sep to Dec or Jan. Sandy soils, laterite. Often along watercourses.
Erect shrub, 0.3-1.5 m high. Flowers pink/white, Jul to Nov. Sandy or clayey soils.
Shrub, 0.3-1 m high. Fl. yellow, Aug to Dec or Jan. Sandy gravelly soils, deep yellow sand. Undulating plains.
SIMPLICITY AXLES
Atlas Travel Centre
Bushtracker Owners Group Inc.
ARB CAPALABA
DIESELHEAT
Lovells Springs P/L
ABCO Caravan Services
Bushtracker
Edwards Tavern WODONGA Vic
BTA Towing Equipment
Absolute Trailer Solutions
Hitch-Ezy Inventor
COOKTOWN HOLIDAY PARK
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