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Acmena smithii
"Lilly-Pilly Tree"
Acmena smithii, the Lilly Pilly tree, its purple berries covering it from crown to foot, is a visual delight in the spring. The color of the berries is unlike any other fruit and the reason for planting it as an ornamental.
Native to Australia's wet eastern shores, the Lilly Pilly thrives in temperate rain forest conditions. It can grow to 100 feet and has lustrous evergreen leaves which have an aromatic scent, linking it to the Myrtle family.
As a timber tree its wood is bright red, very hard, and prized for flooring, turnery and moldings. Thomas Church used lilly pilly in many of his Bay Area gardens designed in the 1950s and later. He often specified that they be shaped to contain their height. SFBG has two trees in the Eastern Australia section. Where did it get its name? We don't know, but the "Australian Encyclopaedia" says that it is most likely taken from the Australian aboriginal language.

Contributors: Docents Joanne Taylor and Kathy McNeil
- Bloom Archive 2008
- Bloom Archive 2007
- Bloom Archive 2006
Picea sitchensisJanuary |
Telanthophora grandifoliaFebruary |
Aeonium arboreum 'Schwartzkopf'March |
LeptospermumApril |
Salvia gesneraefloraMay |
Lavandula spp.
June |
Pelargonium
July |
Fuchsia paniculata
August |
Luma apiculata
September |
Luculia
October |
Arbutus unedo
November |
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Restionaceae
January |
Hellebores
February |
Ceanothus
March |
Rhododendron
April |
Psoralea pinnata
May |
Fremontodendron californicum
June |
Leucadendron argenteum
July |
Crocosmia
August |
Gunnera tinctoria
September |
Pellaea rotundifolia
October |
Fuchsia boliviana
November |
Erica canaliculata
December |
Magnolia campbelli
January |
Magnolia denudata
February |
Camellia
March |
Geranium maderense
April |
Acmena smithii
May |
Eschscholzia californica
June |
Dendromecon harfordii
July |
Romneya coulteri
August |
Eupatorium purpureum
September |
Epilobium canum sp.
October |
Grevillea spp.
November |
Drimys winteri
December |
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