Melaleuca Thymifolia Honey Myrtle. Thymeleaved Honey Myrtle Melaleuca thymifolia dustaway Flickr It produces small clusters of stemless flowers, rich mauve in spring and summer and bluish-purple in early winter. Purple Pink flowers and grey foliage of Melaleuca incana - Thyme Honey Myrtle
Melaleuca Thymifolia 'Thyme Leaf Honey Myrtle' Natives R Us Plant Nursery In Traveston from nativesrus.com.au
The leaves are small and needle-like, about 1 cm long, and have a spicy, thyme-like aroma when crushed The small leaf makes it useful as a low growing hedge
Melaleuca Thymifolia 'Thyme Leaf Honey Myrtle' Natives R Us Plant Nursery In Traveston
The leaves are small and needle-like, about 1 cm long, and have a spicy, thyme-like aroma when crushed The small leaf makes it useful as a low growing hedge Melaleuca thymifolia, commonly known as thyme honey-myrtle, is a plant in the myrtle family Myrtaceae and is native to eastern Australia.It is often noticed in spring, with its attractive, purple flowers and is one of the most commonly cultivated melaleucas
Melaleuca thymifolia, Thyme Honey Myrtle uploaded by victoriam. A fragrant shrub, it usually grows to about 1.0 m (3 ft) tall, has corky bark and slender, wiry stems. Thyme Honey Myrtle Melaleuca Thymifolia has delicate reddish young stems and blue-green foliage, both spicily aromatic when bruised
Melaleuca thymifolia, known as the thyme honeymyrtle is a common Australian plant found in. It produces small clusters of stemless flowers, rich mauve in spring and summer and bluish-purple in early winter. Melaleuca thymifolia, Thyme-leaf Honey-myrtle, is one of a number of small melaleucas that reach a maximum height of about 1.5 metres, spreading to 3 metres.