grevillea semperflorens
The grevillea x semperflorens is a tall and wide shrub, reaching about 2 metres in both height and width.
A hybrid of G. thelemanniana and a yellow-flowered form of G. juniperina, the plant was first discovered in a Plymouth garden in the late 1920s and later collected from the Royal Horticultural Society Gardens in Surrey, England.
Its slim leaves can grow up to 5 cm in length and 0.2 cm in width, with a sharp tip at the end.
The grevillea has a unique inflorescence structure, either cylindrical, single-sided, or condensed, with flowers growing at the terminal ends.
Unlike its close relative Hakea, the grevillea produces flowers beyond the foliage, with each cluster measuring up to 7 cm in width and 4 cm in length. The flowers, composed of a carpel, 4 hidden stamens, and a perianth, come in