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Mullumbimby Creek, New South Wales, Australia
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Mullumbimby Creek, New South Wales, Australia
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Developing seed pods on the Tasmanian waratah. Most plants we have looked at this year have failed to set seed. This plant with a few pods for each inflorescence was doing very well.
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Tasmania, Australia
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Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
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Tasmania, Australia
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Telopea truncata (Tasmanian waratah) with ripening fruit on the slopes of Platfrom Peak, Dromedary State Forest, Tasmania.
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Cradle Mountain NP, Tasmania
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Queensland, Australia
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Queensland, Australia
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Queensland, Australia
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Queensland, Australia
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Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
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Tianjara, New South Wales, Australia
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Blue Mountains National Park west of Sydney, New South Wales. Woodford Range about 2 km south of park entrance gate at Glenbrook.This species always has 7 flowers in each head, surrounded by bracts of varying length, green toward the tips. Genus Lambertia has 9 species in Western Australia and only this one in the east -- a New South Wales endemic. The 2-horned woody fruits earned it the common name "Mountain Devil".
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Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
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Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
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East Ryde, New South Wales, Australia
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Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
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Tianjara, New South Wales, Australia
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Medlow Bath, New South Wales, Australia
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Nattai, New South Wales, Australia
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Proteaceae: Grevillea leptobotrys Dryandra formThis is a beautiful Grevillea which starts flowering this time of the year and goes through December. It grows in gravel soils and has the most sweet honey smell which attracts many bees. The flowers are darker pink when they first open, ageing to light pink.There are a number of leaf forms within this species. It grows up to 50 cm when growing in other shrubs but mostly up to 30cm (1ft). leptobotrys means "Thin bunch of grapes" in reference to the flowers