View allAll Photos Tagged TeaTree
salt paperbark (Melaleuca halmaturorum - also known locally - and poetically - as 'kangaroo honey-myrtle') and common reeds (Phragmites australis) on the banks of the hindmarsh river
victor harbor, fleurieu peninsula, south australia
taken on behalf of the adelaide and mount lofty ranges natural resource management board, coastal management branch
photograph by bill doyle
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Shot of a tea tree and surrounding scrub. Being so high up made for interesting exploration of the hardy heath flora! [Blackheath, Blue Mountains, NSW]
Location: Europe > Portugal > Algarve
Date Photo Taken: July 26, 2009
© Copyright. You cannot use! Only Encyclopedia of Life (EOL)
On Tuesday 1st June 2021 I was lucky enough to see Ricky Gervais filming series 3 of his Netflix comedy-drama After Life on Hemel Hempstead’s old town High Street! They were filming in The Tea Tree Café for episode 3 of series 3. Both Ricky and his co-star Tony Way who plays Lenny were visible on location, along with Tom Andrews who was also in the scene.
After Life was created, written, produced and directed by Ricky Gervais, who also plays the lead character, Tony Johnson. As well as Ricky and Tony Way, the series also stars Tom Basden, Diane Morgan, Penelope Wilton, David Bradley and Ashley Jenson. It’s a very different series to Ricky’s previous work, dealing with the themes of death and suicide but it has helped people deal with their own grief and dark times which is why Ricky has written a third series for the first time. It is a dark series, but it’s also bloody funny! If you have access to Netflix I’d definitely recommend it
Tea plant or Tea shrub or Tea tree or Camellia sinensis, a species of evergreen shrub or small tree whose leaves and leaf buds are used to produce tea, in the Theaceae family, binomial name is Camellia sinensis, cultivated across the world in tropical and subtropical regions.
Location: Vagamon, Idukki District, Kerala State, India.
Leptospermum squarrosum (peach blossom tea-tree) flowers I observed on my walk along the 10 H fire trail and beyond.
Another "Tea tree"
From Petheram & Kok (1983)
"This small tree, 2 to 5m high, invariably grows in clumps or thickets. The leaves are fine, 1 to 2mm long, scale-like and held in smallindentations in the stem. The flowers are white and are found in large clusters amongst the foliage. The fruit is cup-shaped and 2 to 3 mm long. (Occurs) on poor shallow soils which often beocme waterlogged during the wet season. .."
The Yambarran Range in the background. Taken near the new Bradshaw homestead.
Looking like they belong, red galls on a Tea-tree. Wog Wog, Morton National Park, NSW Australia, April 2013.
Taken on a coastal walk along the Currawong Headland, Jervis Bay, New South Wales, Australia. The area abounds with native plants.
Capsules do not persist and fall soon after flowering. Flaky-barked Tea-tree, Leptospermum trinervium. Royal National Park, NSW Australia, January 2012.
On Tuesday 1st June 2021 I was lucky enough to see Ricky Gervais filming series 3 of his Netflix comedy-drama After Life on Hemel Hempstead’s old town High Street! They were filming in The Tea Tree Café for episode 3 of series 3. Both Ricky and his co-star Tony Way who plays Lenny were visible on location, along with Tom Andrews who was also in the scene.
After Life was created, written, produced and directed by Ricky Gervais, who also plays the lead character, Tony Johnson. As well as Ricky and Tony Way, the series also stars Tom Basden, Diane Morgan, Penelope Wilton, David Bradley and Ashley Jenson. It’s a very different series to Ricky’s previous work, dealing with the themes of death and suicide but it has helped people deal with their own grief and dark times which is why Ricky has written a third series for the first time. It is a dark series, but it’s also bloody funny! If you have access to Netflix I’d definitely recommend it
Camellia sinensis
(tea) / origin: southeast Asia
Conservatory of Flowers
Golden Gate Park
San Francisco, California
20220907_154854
Plague Soldier Beetles (Chauliognathus sp.) swarming the Tea Trees to feed and mate. [The Gully Aboriginal Place, Blue Mountains, NSW]
Tea-tree (Leptospermum scoparium) at Dove Lake, Cradle Mountain National Park, Tasmania, Australia. Photographed on 19 January 2010.
Best viewed @ large size
Myrtaceae - E. Australia
Tea Tree
"Leptospermum (pronounced /ˌlɛptɵˈspɜrməm/)[1] is a genus of about 80-86 species of plants in the myrtle family Myrtaceae. Most species are endemic to Australia, with the greatest diversity in the south of the continent; but one species extends to New Zealand, another to Malaysia, and L. recurvum is endemic to Malaysia.
"They are shrubs or occasionally small trees, reaching 1-8 m tall, rarely up to 20 m, with dense branching. The leaves are evergreen, alternate, simple, sharp-tipped, and small, in most species not over 1 cm long. The flowers are up to 3 cm diameter, with five white, pink or red petals." (Wikipedia)
Photographed in San Francisco Botanical Garden - San Francisco, California
Location: Europe > Portugal > Algarve
Date Photo Taken: July 26, 2009
© Copyright. You cannot use! Only Encyclopedia of Life (EOL)
Tea cultivation plantation garden Tee Pflanze Munnar Kerala India - (C) Fully copyrighted. No use of any image whatsoever without written royalty agreement. No answer = no permission at all. - (C) Verwendung generell nur nach schriftl. Honorarvereinbg. Keine Antwort = keine Freigabe.
salt paperbarks (Meleleuca halmaturorum) and saltmarsh, cheetham saltfields, north of adelaide, south australia
taken on behalf of the adelaide and mount lofty ranges natural resource management board, coastal management branch
photograph by bill doyle
As the train trundled on through, I took photos of the plants growing on the sheer cliff faces beside it (like this ambitious Leptospermum). Australian plants are very tough and will make a go of it where they can! [Clarence, NSW]
tea tree with long anthers.
The Basin track, Kuringai Chase NP, Sydney,
Leptospermum trinervium (possible ID by Dan)
salt paperbark (Melaleuca halmaturorum), tokuremoar reserve, fleurieu peninsula, south australia
taken on behalf of the adelaide and mount lofty ranges natural resource management board, coastal management branch
photograph by bill doyle
Mount Tomah South, Blue Mountains National Park, New South Wales. In boggy gully on steep sandstone mountain slope. This species is distinctive for the dense woolly hairs on backs of sepals and floral tube (see at larger sizes).