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Last date for orders to be dispatched prior to Christmas is Sunday 15th December. Every effort will be made to ensure you receive your order prior to Christmas although we cannot 100% guarantee this.

*** Wishing a very Merry Christmas to all our fellow Gumnuts. ***


FREE UK Mainland delivery for All Tree Orders
(excluding 50 litre pot size and above or trees taller than 3.00m, or Highlands and Islands - contact us
for a quote)

Got a query? call us on 01905 888 098

(Excluding 50 litre pots and above or trees over 3.50m tall (inc the pot),

unless specifically advertised on the product page and
Highlands and Islands- Contact us for a quote)

We are RHS Master Grower 2024

ORDER NOW for delivery in time for Christmas

Last date for orders to be dispatched prior to Christmas is Sunday 15th December. Every effort will be made to ensure you receive your order prior to Christmas although we cannot 100% guarantee this.
*** Wishing a very Merry Christmas to all our fellow Gumnuts. ***

Eucalyptus mitchelliana – Mount Buffalo Sally – 1 of the magnificent Mountain Gums

£59.00£198.00

Eucalyptus mitchelliana

Why we like this variety:-

  • Small to medium-sized evergreen tree of elegant semi-weeping habit
  • Excellent specimen tree, especially for winter interest
  • Smaller but delightfully reminiscent of Silver Birch or Weeping Willow
  • Easy to grow in normal soil to sharp draining ground

Sizes Quoted are the approximate height band of the tree above compost level, ie. the height of the tree once planted into the ground. Please note: Eucalyptus are living plants and can grow almost all year round, occasionally we may supply you with a plant that is slightly taller than your order. If this might cause you problems, please include a note with your order.

Click the dropdown below to view our different sizes & prices.

REF: EUCAZU2-2
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Description

Eucalyptus mitchelliana

Rare and beautiful small to medium sized tree of mallee (bushy) habit with an open crown and pendulous leaves. Like an evergreen, golden, Weeping Willow or Silver Birch in habit, but only half the size of the latter.

Eucalyptus mitchelliana is the favourite tree of the former head of Forestry Commission Scotland because of its gently weeping habit with golden stems

Fabulous Specimen Tree for the wider landscape, arboretum collection or avenue planting and for the smaller, medium and larger garden

Commercially: a good choice for open public spaces, parks, business parks, university campus

In Australia, Eucalyptus mitchelliana enjoys a cool summer climate – so it should love the UK!

Needs a little time to get its roots down and to become established, for a Eucalyptus, but takes off pretty well after a few months in the ground.

 

Visit the ‘How to Use’ Tab for a wider description and also to see how you can use and enjoy this species in your landscape

The ‘Planting and Soil’ Tab advises you about this Eucs preferred growing conditions

 

Biometrics for Eucalyptus mitchelliana

Shoots ‘n Leaves: Very ornamental foliage.  Young shoots are beautifully tinged with purple.

Juvenile leaves are lanceolate (long and slender) tinged purple, almost feathery in habit

Adult leaves narrowly lanceolate around 7-15cm long, often bright green with red petioles on young plants and blue-green on older plants.  From a distance, the foliage is glossy green with a slight golden hue.

Bark: Beautiful – one of its many features.  Smooth, pure white through cream to seal grey, often with olive green highlights. Peels in strips and flakes

Flowers: White, buds in clusters of 7,9 or 11

Leaf Aroma: Fruity Eucalyptus

Rate of Growth: medium 1.0-1.5m (3-4ft) per year with a bushy habit

Height in maturity, if left unpruned:   after about 15-20 years, E mitchelliana could reach approximately 12-14 m, easily half the size of a Silver Birch tree.  Easy to keep smaller by regular pruning – March 18th and end of May.

If pruned, it can be trained to form a bushy screening tree, or a multi-stemmed bush like a species rose or coppiced Hazel tree.  Responds well to coppicing and pollarding, when large enough to survive the process and provided its done at the right time of year.  Unless you are growing for cut foliage, please refrain from voluntarily electing to prune your Eucalyptus from August through to February; it can kill it.

To receive monthly pruning and aftercare advice, sign up to our Gumnut Club – its free and you can unsubscribe at any time.  To subscribe – just call or ping us an email to [email protected]

Further advice on pruning can be found in our Guidance Notes here: https://www.hardy-eucalyptus.com/pruning-guides-for-eucalyptus/

Visit our pruning video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tP4ldDRtHeQ

Hardiness: Good hardiness rating, root-system should be happy down to around -13 to -16°C, once mature.

Hardiness in Eucalyptus is governed by

  • provenance of seed (all our seed is sourced from frosty or cold locations)
  • how it is grown (i.e. high nitrogen levels reduces cold tolerance),
  • the age of the tree – the older your tree, the hardier it will be. Younger Eucs are more susceptible to frost damage.
  • how long it has been planted in the ground. The deeper you can encourage the rooting by digging a deep planting pit at the time of installation, the quicker your tree will establish and you will increase its ability to survive cold winters. See our planting notes for more details.

For more information on how to help your Eucalyptus become more hardy – see our Guidance Notes here: https://www.hardy-eucalyptus.com/hardiness-and-eucalyptus-trees-in-the-uk/

Additional information

Weight 4 kg
Dimensions 150 × 50 × 50 cm
Size

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Planting Position and Soil

Eucalyptus mitchelliana

Requirements:

  • Sun: Enjoys full sun and open sky above. Avoid shade cast by other tall trees and buildings.
  • Soil type: happy in normal to free draining garden soils that are acidic and neutral.   E. mitchelliana is not tolerant of limestone or alkaline soils.

In a garden setting, an annual supplement of Iron sequestrene in March will make it even happier and improve its depth of foliage colour. Also give Iron sequestrene to Japanese Maples, Hydrangea, Magnolia and similar calcifuge plants.

  • Soil moisture levels: Requires a free draining soil in winter, hates having wet feet in the winter.  However, water well during the summer, for 2 growing seasons, to ensure your tree establishes well.
  • Environment: Good in exposed locations – see ‘How to Use’ tab

Recommendations:

  • For the best results, follow our planting and aftercare watering instructions, issued with every order; they can also be found under the Help and Advice tab on this website.
  • Improve poor soils with our planting kit, at the time of planting.
  • To encourage deep rooting and therefore good stability, prepare a deep planting pit as per our instructions.
  • Ensure there is no competition from weeds or grass around the base of the young tree as this will seriously cramp its style and slow down establishment. Our research has found that grass around the trunks of newly planted Eucalypts can completely stop them from growing and may lead to failure
  • Make life easier for you and your new tree: Plant with the mycorrhizal fungi product Rootgrow.  Eucalyptus in particular have a special, lifelong relationship with their root fungi, the latter of which actively transport food and water directly into the tree roots, helping your new Euc establish faster and more efficiently, particularly in challenging types of soil.

How to Use

Eucalyptus mitchelliana

How to use in the landscape and/or garden: How to grow or train it to get the best out of it

Fabulous Rare Specimen Tree for the wider landscape, arboretum collection or avenue planting and for the smaller, medium and larger garden

Commercially: a good choice for open public spaces, parks, business parks, university campus

Rare only because people have not yet discovered this wonderful tree, not because it is difficult or challenging – it isn’t.

 Growing a full-sized standard: planting the tree and running away is an option, but it won’t necessarily give you the best results.  This is particularly important with Eucalyptus mitchelliana as it has a weeping habit and therefore the leading shoot is always leaning over. This in turn leads to the formation of a more-bushy young tree. Remain vigilant and help your tree grow vertically into a shapely mature specimen.

We suggest you maintain a leading shoot and tip prune the lateral shoots to encourage a little bushiness.  Keep all the sides shoots as they are building up the strength of the main trunk.

  • To grow a large specimen, leave the tree to grow up naturally thereafter.
  • For a small tree, tip prune the leader when it reaches 1.2m, thereafter let the head develop. Then prune the tree every March 18th and end of May to keep your tree small and bushy.

For more, see our guidance notes for growing specimen Eucalyptus in our Help and Advice section.

For monthly emails on how and when to prune and care for your Eucalyptus, sign up to our Gumnut Club and we’ll send you the Bush Telegraph – it’s totally free and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Growing shrub-on-a-stick clipped standard: this is an opportunity to grow a Eucalyptus in a confined space like a courtyard and also control its overall size. You can produce a small tree on a trunk with a height of anywhere between 2.4m (8ft) and 4m (12ft). Prune back growth every March 18th or thereabouts and tip prune the annual growth back by up to 90% at the end of May. Light tip pruning can be done again during July, but no later. Don’t prune from August through to February.

REMEMBER: No grass, no weeds and a thick boring bark chip mulch, to a depth of 150 mm (6 inches) are essential to assist with good establishment. Our research trials have demonstrated that grass around the trunk of Eucalyptus prevent the trees from quickly establishing and can completely stop them from growing.

Floral Art:  Eucalyptus mitchelliana is not on our ‘Cut foliage’ list, but I see no reason why you could not use the odd branch in a vase of flowers

Firewood Production:  Eucalyptus mitchelliana is not on our selected species list for Biomass or Firewood.

Rural/Agricultural:

  • Good shade tree for livestock to stand under. Eucalyptus provide a cool environment for horses, cattle, llamas, sheep to shelter from the sun on hot days, as the mass evaporation of water through the leaves creates a cool shady canopy beneath. Good choice for silvopasture on a free-draining soil.

Ecology:

  • All Eucalyptus produce useful flowers providing foraging for honey-bees and other pollinating insects

 

Environmental:

  • Growing on the Coast  Eucalyptus mitchelliana is a snow gum and a mountain gum, and geographically grows amongst the other Australian snow gums – i.e. it is a hardy tree. It will tolerate a light sea-spray so best a few miles in from the sea.

To make this work, we recommend that:

  1. you plant a smaller specimen ( 5 litre pot, around 1m-1.2m tall)
  2. encourage fast establishment in a deeply prepared planting pit (follow our planting advice), to encourage deep rooting to grow an upright, stable tree.
  3. Staking will be required.
  4. Newly planted trees will very likely require a wind break shelter for their first winter in the ground with you.
  5. Zero grass or weeds during the period of establishment is non-negotiable!
  • Tolerant of cold and exposed growing environments inland mitchelliana will grow in open fields and pasture, once established.

We recommend

  • you plant a smaller specimen (less than 1.8m tall in a 3 or 5 litre air-pot)
  • encourage fast establishment in a deeply prepared planting pit (follow our planting advice), to encourage deep rooting to grow an upright, stable tree
  • Staking will be required
  • In exposed locations, newly planted trees will very likely require a wind break shelter made from horticultural fleece or sail cloth, for their first winter in the ground with you; this very much depends on the level of exposure
  • Zero grass or weeds during the period of establishment is non-negotiable!

 

  • Tolerant of poor stony soils once established  E. mitchelliana is happy on poor, stony soils and does not require a rich soil.   Tolerant of arid environments, poor stony dry soils once established. It is essential that your Euc. is given our recommended quantity of water for its first 2 growing seasons in your grounds, during its establishment phase before you abandon it to its fate.  The tree needs to establish a good, deep root system before it can survive in dry, challenging conditions. No grass, no weeds and a thick bark chip mulch, to a depth of 150 mm (6 inches) are essential to assist with good establishment. Growth on impoverished soils will always be reduced.

Nursery Notes and Trivia

Late Summer into Winter 2024

12 litre standards are ready now in a small number

5 litre stock is also available with some smaller 5 litre available in Autumn

Botanical Name: Eucalyptus mitchelliana

Common Name:  Mount Buffalo Sallee or Gum

Status: Evergreen Tree                       Family: MYRTACEÆ; Myrtle Family

Origin: E. mitchelliana is a type of snow gum from the sub-alpine zone of rocky granite outcrops on Mount Buffalo plateau, Victoria, where it grows alongside the other Snow Gums – E. pauciflora group

 Lignotuber:  it has one, which is a good thing!  Eucalyptus mitchelliana will regenerate off the lignotuber if cut down by man, beast or nature.  It also produces many shoots from epicormic buds lying dormant beneath the bark higher up the tree; so Eucalyptus mitchelliana will respond extremely well to both coppicing and pollarding practices, once large enough to tolerate it.

What is a lignotuber?  See our Blog post on the subject https://www.hardy-eucalyptus.com/lignotuber-on-toast-anyone/

 Meaning of the name: Named after Major Sir Thomas Livingstone Mitchell (1792–1855), Surveyor-General of New South Wales

Interesting Notes:

Eucalyptus mitchelliana is the favourite tree of the former head of Forestry Commission Scotland because of its gently weeping habit with golden stems

Eucalyptus mitchelliana  belongs in Eucalyptus subgenus section Longitudinales, which it shares with E. stellulata and E. moorei (with 2 subspecies).

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