Eremophila kalbarri carpet eremophila glabra.
Eremophila kalbarri carpet planting.
Eremophila glabra kalbarri carpet emu bush kalbarri carpet will reach a height of 0 3m and a spread of 2m after 5 10 years.
Featuring handsome silvery foliage and contrasting golden flowers which bloom mainly during spring and summer.
A nice choice as a soft ground cover in your garden.
Drought and frost tolerant.
Eremophila kalbarri carpet is a gorgeous native groundcover with silvery grey foliage that forms a stunning carpet.
Eremophila glabra kalbarri carpet a lovely ground cover shrub with dense soft grey foliage and beautifully contrasting yellow gold flowers.
Eremophila glabra kalbarri carpet develops into a dense ground cover with a spread exceeding two metres.
Cottage informal containers beds and borders banks and slopes garden edging ground cover mediterranean wallside and trellises.
A yellow flowered prostrate form called kalbarri carpet is available as is the variety murchison magic a silvery leaved form with red flowers.
It spreads out to around two metres needs well drained soil and is drought and frost tolerant.
Bright yellow orange flowers appear in spring summer forming a rosette around the stem at the base of the.
Eremophila kalbarri carpet is a western australian plant that is a groundcover form of eremophila glabra.
Eremophila glabra amber carpet a very useful tough and hardy groundcover plant for dry places.
Stunning silver grey foliage is a nice contrast to any native garden.
Growing to a dense carpet covering up to 2 square metres.
The tubular flowers are yellow rich in nectar and form a ring around the stems at the base of each leaf.
Yellow tubular flowers appear over spring and summer.
Main flowering is in spring and summer with spot flowers in winter and autumn and birds and other nectar feeders love them.
It grows to around 30 centimetres high and can cover around 2 3 metres wide with attractive grey green foliage.
Foliage is soft and silvery grey.
Birds butterflies and bees adore this plant and you ll have wildlife aplenty.
Eremophila glabra is popular in native gardens and a number of cultivars have been developed.