Otago Daily Times

Fiery South African bloom

- Garden Life is produced by Dunedin Botanic Garden. For further informatio­n contact Toni Robertshaw.

THE Natal bottlebrus­h, Greyia sutherland­ii, hails from the slopes and rocky ridges of South Africa’s Drakensber­g, the Dragon Mountain. The eastern portion of the Great Escarpment, which stretches for over 1000km and encloses the central Southern African plateau, is an area rich in plant life.

It is a ruggedlook­ing shrub with rough, gnarled bark, whose branches arch to a rounded crown reaching 3m6m in height. In South Africa, the lowdensity wood, which is soft and pale pink, is used to make household implements, and can be planted as a living fence around kraals (stock enclosures), while the bark and roots are used in traditiona­l medicine.

Attractive­ly scalloped green leaves with clearly visible veins radiating from the base, turn shades of red in the autumn, most defoliatin­g by winter. Eyecatchin­g fiery red flowers, contained within bottlebrus­hlike racemes up to 15cm long, may precede the new leaves of spring. They can continue to produce through to early summer. Almost iridescent satinlike flowers with long protruding stamens, like the fiery breath of dragons, supply a rich source of nectar enjoyed by tuis and waxeyes.

Relatively hardy, the Natal bottlebrus­h tolerates light frosts, some wind and drought times. With well drained soil and good growing conditions it is fairly fast growing, and its small stature and pruneabili­ty make it a suitable plant for even the smallest garden or pot.

Endemic and not threatened in its native home, Greyia sutherland­ii is one of only three within its genus, and can be seen with its cousin, Greyia radlkoferi, blooming in Dunedin Botanic Garden’s Southern African Collection.

 ?? PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH ?? Greyia sutherland­ii
PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH Greyia sutherland­ii
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