Hi
I am interested in following a route from Mt Baw Baw to Mt Erica, via Mts Mueller & Tyers. The contours and distances seem doable, but I'm keen to hear from anyone who can advise on the scrub conditions.
andrewbish wrote:We encountered this prickly plant, generally guarding the access to the creeks in the open, mossy areas. It was up to chest height, with long, strong stems. Does anyone know the name of it?
MickyB wrote:andrewbish wrote:We encountered this prickly plant, generally guarding the access to the creeks in the open, mossy areas. It was up to chest height, with long, strong stems. Does anyone know the name of it?
Looks like Richea scoparia which doesn't grow in Victoria. Perhaps Richea victoriana (I've never actually see one so it's just a guess)
Narrowly erect shrub 0.7–2 m high; older branches with prominent annular scars. Leaves usually persisting only on the upper 5–40 cm of stem, spreading, sometimes slightly twisted, ovate-lanceolate to triangular, 3–10 cm long, 5–11 mm wide, flat to concave; apex straight or decurved, shortly pungent-pointed; margins serrulate. Flowers in dense narrow spike-like panicles to c. 12 cm long; peduncle not or only slightly exserted from leaf-sheaths; inflorescence axis glabrous; lateral branches to 18 mm long; sepals 4 or 5, broadly ovate, 1.2–1.5 mm long, obtuse to subacute; corolla white, 3.5–4 mm long; anthers narrowly oblong; filaments 3–3.5 mm long; nectary absent, style c. 1.5–1.7 mm long. Fruit c. 2 mm long; seeds 0.8–1.1 mm long.
Restricted to montane and subalpine sites on and near the Baw Baw Plateau and the Blue Range, between Marysville and Taggerty. Occurs in wet heathland, wet scrub or margins of cool-temperate rainforest.
neilmny wrote:I think it's Richea Continentis or Candle Heath and it is fairly prickly.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richea_continentis
Lots of it about in the Baw Baws.
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