Behold the Banksia - Gardening Australia Magazine Archives

Taken from: https://www.gardeningaustraliamag.com.au/behold-the-banksia/ 

These iconic Aussie flowers bring the wow factor – as well as abundant wildlife – to any garden.

From standout flowers to unique foliage and intriguing fruiting cones, banksias have countless exquisite and distinctive physical traits. They range from spectacular trees to spreading groundcovers, and many even thrive in pots. Numerous species such as acorn banksia (Banksia prionotes) and coast banksia (B. integrifolia) flower for months, raising them to legend status with cut flower enthusiasts.

Many species of Banksia have a groundcover form.

Banksia integrifolia ‘Roller Coaster’ exploring it’s way along the ground.

Of about 180 species (including 100 previously classified as Dryandra), all are endemic to Australia alone, bar tropical banksia (B. dentata). This 7m tree occurs also in Papua New Guinea and Indonesia, and tolerates seasonally wet soil.

Autumn is the best time to plant natives, and banksias need excellent drainage. Many species, including the heath-leaved banksia (B. ericifolia) at 2–7m tall and ‘Little Eric’ at 1.5–2m tall, cope with heavier soils but don’t like their roots sitting in water.

An everlasting favourite

There’s lots of different of forms this species, pictured here is B. spinulosa ‘Birthday Candles’

Here are some reasons to love this native plant:

Fantastic flowers

Every stage of the banksia flower’s development is captivating, and many varieties have exceptional inflorescences. The aptly named B. grandis has spikes up to 40cm long. Woolly banksia (B. baueri) – a 2m shrub – has huge, huggable flowers and contrasting stiff foliage, as does ‘Pygmy Possum’, a dense prostrate form of B. serrata that spreads to 3m.

The nectar-laden blooms come in (mostly) shades of yellow, orange, green and brown, and are very attractive to insects, birds and mammals. Even ‘dead’ flowers left on the plant become a food source for seed-eaters and provide a home for tiny critters.

All shapes and sizes

Quirky prostrate groundcovers such as B. blechnifolia and its ilk have thick, upright toothed foliage and cylindrical flowers in shades of pink, red, cream and rust that appear to grow straight out of the ground. Pair these with tussock grasses under an open-canopied tree for interesting textural contrast.

The eponymous ‘Roller Coaster’ is a prostrate form of the 4–15m coast banksia. At 50cm tall and 2.5m wide, it covers large embankments and rockeries with ease. ‘Sentinel’ is a handy narrow form, 2.5m tall by 1m wide. Hedge it or add it to a wide bed with a burgundy New Zealand flax and low sprawlers such as Leptospermum ‘Pink Cascade’. All forms of coast banksia are drought, salt, wind and frost tolerant.

Adaptability

Banksias grow naturally in a wide range of environments, primarily around the country’s perimeter. South-west Western Australia is a hotspot and home to honeypot dryandra (B. nivea) and scarlet banksia (B. coccinea), pictured below. Most species come from a tiny geographical range but are surprisingly adaptable to different climates and soils.

Banksias like full sun and well-drained soil, but there are exceptions. At 1–3m tall, swamp banksia (B. robur) suits wet spots and grows best as an understorey plant in temperate, subtropical and tropical climates. Its architectural form, toothed leaves and green and black flowers make it a feature!

A favourite.

One of my all-time favourite forms of B. spinulosa called ‘Golden Candles’. I love the entriely bright yellow flowers, standing proud of the foliage.

The Swamp Banksia, pictured here growing in a SE Qld indigneous garden

This species grows up the Australia east coast, from central NSW to far north Qld. It is a species not only tolerant, but in need, of a consistent supply of water. If you’ve wet and boggy soils at home and you want a banksia in your garden, this is the species for you! The big, structural foliage and green to black flowers are standouts in the garden.
There’s a dwarf form available at specialist nurseries and a purple leaf form, too.

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