This is one of my favourite small trees. I love combining it with the larger leaved Magnolia grandiflora, whose leaves are the same colour, just lots larger. Also looks great with NZ natives, with the more olive and russet tones tying in perfectly, particularly with totara trees - again, for that textural contrast.
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Michelia yunnanensis in flower |
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The buds are like russet velvet |
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Lovely for combining with larger leaved trees, with similar colour - here is Magnolia Little Gem |
The flower buds are like a russet velvet, then opening up to these gorgeous creamy flowers. Did I mention that the flowers are fragrant? I have some inside my office at the moment and they are perfuming the air beautifully.
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These are being trimmed into loose standards. |
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I adore the Michelia combined with NZ native grasses and other russet/olive green plants |
There are several variations on this Michelia, with M. gracipes at least as nice. I am training these ones into standards, but they can also be trimmed into hedges, loose balls, or left to grow into a naturally pyramidal small tree. Gorgeous!!
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The flowers are beautifully fragrant |
And that is quite the trick, isn't it, to combine them with the right other plants to fully appreciate the colours and textures. That's where your wonderful eye for design comes in. A gorgeous little tree…they do really well here in Melbourne too, but I love the idea of mixing them with olives and grey toned leaves.
ReplyDeleteMany are breathtaking the in the spring, beautiful in form, and they produce delicious fruit. There are many cultivars of fruiting trees with different growth heights at maturity, and all take well to pruning and shaping. Landscaping Georgetown TX
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