10 Greyia Flanaganii Tree Seeds - Kei Bottlebrush - Flat Ship Rate + Free Seeds With All Orders



10 Greyia Flanaganii Tree Seeds - Kei Bottlebrush - Flat Ship Rate + Free Seeds With All Orders
Greyia flanaganii SeedsKei Bottlebrush Tree SeedsThis is a stunning shrub or small, much-branched, evergreen tree that grows up to 3 m in height. The bark is smooth and pale brown. The leaves are ovate to almost circular and are crowded at the ends of the branches. The upper side of the leaf is grey-green to dark green and sparsely hairy, whereas ... more details

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Description
Greyia flanaganii SeedsKei Bottlebrush Tree SeedsThis is a stunning shrub or small, much-branched, evergreen tree that grows up to 3 m in height. The bark is smooth and pale brown. The leaves are ovate to almost circular and are crowded at the ends of the branches. The upper side of the leaf is grey-green to dark green and sparsely hairy, whereas the underside is pale green, heavily veined and densely hairy. The leaf margin is broadly scalloped and toothed, and usually slightly lobed. Greyia flanaganii commonly known as Kei Bottlebrush in English and Kei Baakhout in Afrikaans has showy, bright red, bell-shaped flowers in lax, few-flowered, downward-pointing racemes during spring (from August to October). Each flower is about 2 cm long with red stamens and style protruding from the mouth of the petal tube. The outer whorl of the stamens of this genus has lost its function of producing pollen and the stamens have been transformed into nectar glands. The nectar-rich flowers attract many insects such as honeybees, as well as pollinators like sunbirds. The fruits of this exciting shrub are 2.5 x 0.7 cm, brownish and cylindrical, and split along their inner surfaces to release the small seeds. Greyia flanaganii is a rare endemic of Eastern Cape, where it is found on the grassy hillsides and among rocks on the steep slopes of the Kei River and its tributaries, the Toise and Kabusi Rivers. The seedlings are tiny and fragile. This may be the reason why these shrubs are often found emerging from fissures in rocks. The Xhosa people place the roots of this Eastern Cape tree on either side of their kraals (enclosures) as it is thought to ward off sickness and prevent theft of livestock. The genus Greyia was named in honour of Sir George Grey, 1812-1898, who was the Governor of the Cape Colony in the second part of the 19th century. He was also a great patron of botany. The species was named after Henry George Flanagan, 1861-1919, a South African-born collector and traveller. Flanagan also owned Prospect Farm in the Komga District of Eastern Cape, where he developed a noteworthy garden containing rare exotics as well as South African trees and shrubs. Greyia flanaganii is one of three closely related species of the taxonomically isolated and endemic southern African family, the Greyiaceae The other two species in the Greyiaceae family, Greyia radlkoferi and G. sutherlandii are dormant and leafless in winter, unlike G. flanaganii, which is evergreen. G. radlkoferi is found in Mpumalanga and Limpopo (Northern Province) and G. sutherlandii is from KwaZulu-Natal. The greyias of South Africa do not appear to have close relatives among the extant flora of the world. Steyn et al 1999 refer to a theory that greyias deserve to be placed in a separate order. Greyiaceae belongs in the monotypic order Greyiales that was formerly described and placed between the Saxifragales and Francoyales.You're buying a pack of 10 SeedsWe'll supply you with all the germination & care instructions.
There are no offers currently available for this product. The last offer was seen on 02/11/2017 from BidorBuy for R18.50
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