Grevillea


Beautiful shrub that attracts hummingbirds and butterflies. It is an excellent screen as well.

Great for floral arrangements and attracts hummingbirds. I'd plant it in part sun unless you live on the California coast.


Beautiful ground cover native to Australia.


Beautiful ground cover with apricot colored flowers. Drought tolerant when established.

One of the more hardy grevillea that adapt to the Southern California climate.

*Don't use fertilizer on these plants!

One of the more hardy grevillea that adapt to the Southern California climate.

Beautiful ground cover with soft. colorful foliage.

*Don't use fertilizer on these plants!


Beautiful ground cover Grevillea. Full sun coastal and part sun inland in Southern California!


Beautiful pale cream flowers and cool looking seeds.

Keep it out of wind prone areas or it can look a little sparse. *Don't use fertilizer on these plants!


Stunning flowers and attracts birds to your yard!


A little spiky, but a wonderful drought tolerant plant.


Fast growing, beautiful, unique, and interesting foliage.

Beautiful foliage and flowers! Keep fertilizers away and prune it for year round blooms.


Tough and resilient Grevillea. This is a very tolerant Grevillea!

Delicate foliage and beautiful flowers.

Beautiful multicolored flowers and interesting foliage. Don't fertilize these plants!

Grevillea dimorpha

Dead Grevillea

1) Grevillea ‘Big Bird’ (died) . I'd try it again and plant it in mostly shade/ morning sun only

2) Grevillea Thelemanniana ‘Spider net grevillea’ (died). This plant grew very fast and was going great until a spring heatwave. It would have probably survived in a part sun environment. The afternoon sun got this plant.

3) Grevliea lavandulacea ‘Penola’ (died). This plant was beautiful for 2 years and grew quickly in a mostly sun location. Some frost in the winter affected this plant and it didn't every bounce back. This plant didn't like frost... I should have covered it.

4) Grevillea ‘Bonfire’ (died) It did well for 2 years and then it was growing very quickly in the spring. A heatwave killed all the new growth and it never recovered. I'd try it again and give it only morning sun in Southern California.

5) Grevillea “Poorinda Signet” (died) This is a beautiful grevillea that did well until a few cold nights. It is not as frost hardy as other grevillea in my experience, because some high 20's killed this plant.

6) Grevillea King (died) This had a lime greenish color and bright red flowers. It was beautiful but couldn't tolerate our hot summer.

7) Grevillea rhyolitica ‘Deua Flame’ (died) This looked very different from all other grevillea. It had wide leaves that looked similar to an olive tree. I think I gave it too much water.

8) Grevillea Victoriae “Murray Valley Queen” (died) I gave it part sun and it didn't survive long. I think it couldn't handle our inland heat.

9) Grevillea “Poorinda Royal Mantle (died) It was doing well in part sun and acted like a vine on the ground. Someone snapped the stem on accident with a toy.

Grevillea rosmarinifolia ‘Dwarf Form’