Description
Eucalyptus pauciflora subsp. pauciflora ‘Adaminiby’ – White Sallee Snow Gum
A tree with a light open canopy, drawing the eye up in a garden by giving height without creating a heavy shade canopy. Great for xerophytic gardens, ones that have low rainfall, and winter gardens through being evergreen and having spectacular bark.
Biometrics for Eucalyptus pauciflora subsp. pauciflora Adaminiby – White Sallee
Shoots ‘n Leaves: Very ornamental foliage. Young shoots are a glowing bronze pink with golden tips. Young stems are burgundy coloured and coated in a white bloom.
Juvenile leaves – Very large grey blue leaves, up to 22 cm long and 9 cm wide; some of them very square in outline.
Adult foliage – long slender falcate or lanceolate and french-blue grey-green.
Bark: One of its best features. Smooth, tactile, pearly white and clotted cream with pearl-grey mosaic, shedding in jigsaw-like pieces midsummer to reveal new white bark beneath
Flowers: White, and in groups of 9-15 – quite prolific.
Leaf Aroma: Faintly minty, but not your typical strong eucalyptol as it is a snow gum
Rate of Growth: medium 1.0-1.5 metres per year.
Height in maturity, if left unpruned: After about 10 years, this species could attain 10-15 metres
To give you a sense of scale – I guess this would be equal to or slightly taller than a two storey house, shorter than a mature Silver Birch tree. Quite an upright habit.
After about 15-20 years, Eucalyptus pauciflora subsp. pauciflora ‘Adaminiby’ could reach around 15 – 20m or more, over a very long period of time – decades. Easy to keep smaller by regular pruning – March 18th and end of May.
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]
Eucalyptus pauciflora subsp. pauciflora ‘Adaminiby’
Hardiness: Good hardiness rating, root-system should be happy down to around -14 to -18°C, once mature. This is one of the hardiest of all Eucalyptus! Please note younger trees are less tolerant of frost and may suffer exposure damage in early years at low temperatures
Hardiness in Eucalyptus is governed by
- provenance of seed (all our hardy species seed is sourced from frosty or cold locations)
- how it is grown (i.e. high nitrogen levels and/or high water table reduces cold tolerance)
- the tree is not stressed by lack of moisture, , competition from other trees or grass around the trunk.
- the planting site has good frost drainage and does not sit in a frost pocket
- the age of the tree – the older your tree, the hardier it will be. Younger Eucs are more susceptible to frost damage at low temperatures after periods of warmth.
- 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.