Bring Australia in your own backyard and enjoy it everyday!
The Australia's Wildflowers Collection is a brand new selection of the very best and finest of our beautiful native flora. The range includes a huge diversity of species from low-growing groundcovers, the medium-sized shrubs and perennials, through to large Eucalypts that make excellent trees for parks, gardens and farms. They also make a perfect gift!
Choose from the list below and make your selection on the tab at the right hand side
Albany Bottlebrush
Vivid, bright scarlet-red 'brushes' adorn this attractive and compact shrub, which is an iconic plant well-recognised in Australia and increasingly in gardens throughout the world.
Australian Grass Tree
A classic Australian native found in many parts of the country. Forming large, black trunks over many years the plants are extremely hardy and tolerate drought, fire, cold and heat.
Blue Rottnest Island Daisy Bright purple, pincushion-like flowers cover these attractive, low-growing plants. Found on Rottnest Island but also in mainland Western Australia
Bush Rose
Stunning bright red flowers that hang in clusters from drooping branches. This superb Eucalypt makes an excellent and easy to grow, long-lived garden or street tree
Coral Creeper An excellent low-water-use groundcover or container feature, the Coral Creeper produces bright pink pea-like flowers on horizontal stems. Easy to grow and trouble-free
Dwarf Wattle
A shorter, bushier variety of New South Wales' iconic floral emblem, the dwarf wattle produces large golden sprays of blooms from the tips of its branches.
Everlasting Daisies
Stunning, brightly coloured paper daisies in a myriad of colours. Ideal for dry landscape mass bedding, borders, container or cut flowers, they are at their best when in bloom in Spring
Golden Everlasting Daisies
An easy to grow annual featuring vivid golden-yellow blooms, making it a popular choice in cultivation for massed bedding and cut flowers. The plants are easy to grow and can be trimmed
Gungurru 'Silver Princess'
A beautiful and adaptable large tree to about 10m high, featuring large red blooms on pendulous branches. The flowers are a good source of nectar for honey bees and other native wildlife
Illyarie Red Cap Gum
Widely seen around Perth and southern Western Australia, this bushy eucalypt offer stunning flowers in distinctive yellow and red. The flowers first form as waxy, bright red flowerpods
Karri Blue Bush
Delightful shrubs with deep green glossy leaves and deep purple, pea-like flowers with white centres. The plants are easy to grow and provide a useful backdrop to shorter plants in sun
Lilac Painted Lady
Dwarf shrubs with spindly leaves and delicate, pale-purple flowers with deeper purple inner petals. They are suitable for mass-planting or even for use as cutflowers.
Mixed Colours Kangaroo Paw Tall varieties of Kangaroo Paws in mixed colours of red, yellow, pink and apricot. Growing to in excess of 1.5m, these form stately clumps of long-lasting flowers
Native Wisteria
Also known as Native Sarsaparilla, this attractive and hardy groundcover has become a trusted landscape addition in parks, gardens and urban plantings.
Pincushion Hakea
This upright shrub features really distinctive, round, pincushion-like flowers with red, waxy centre and spiky yellow tips. The plants reach 2.5-4m in height
Red Runner Also commonly known as Running Postman, this beautiful groundcover provides vibrant Spring colour. At one time, this species was abundant in what is now metropolitan Melbourne
Scarlet Gold-Tipped Kunzea
Easy to grow plants related to Callistemons, these shrubs reach up to 3m in height and produce large circular sprays of vivid red blooms
Silver Wattle
One of Australia's most popular Wattles, the Silver Wattle is an easy to grow and reliable shrub to about 5m in height. The plant features silvery leaves (actually flattened stems
Swan Peach Myrtle Features flowers that resemble peach blossom, and forms a sturdy shrub to about 1.5m high. The flowers appear along the leaf axils in Spring and make good cut flowers that last well.
West Australian Christmas Tree
Named after the early explorer Pieter Nuyts who almost found Australia, the WA Christmas Tree lights up the WA coastline around November and December each year.