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Ceratopetalum gummiferum, the New South Wales Christmas bush, is a tall shrub or small tree popular in cultivation due to its sepals that turn bright red-pink at around Christmas time. [ 1 ] The specific name gummiferum alludes to the large amounts of gum that is discharged from cut bark.
Prostanthera lasianthos is the largest member of the mint bush genus Prostanthera.Highly variable in habit, it ranges from a 10-metre-high (30 ft) tree in sheltered forest to a 2-metre-high (7 ft) shrub in exposed montane areas. [4]
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Christmas bush may refer to: Bursaria spinosa, a small tree or shrub that occurs in all Australian states; Ceratopetalum gummiferum, a tall shrub from Australia also known as the New South Wales Christmas bush; Chromolaena odorata, a tropical species of shrub from the sunflower family; Comocladia dodonaea, a poisonous shrub of Caribbean islands
Prostanthera lasianthos - Victorian Christmas bush. [7] Several plants in Australia are referred to or used as Christmas trees, including Nuytsia floribunda and the Norfolk Island Pine, which is commonly sold in Australian stores during the Christmas season and is usually marketed as a "Living Christmas tree". [8]
Senna bicapsularis is a species of the legume genus Senna, native to northern South America, from Panama south to Venezuela and Colombia, and also the West Indies. [1] Common names include rambling senna (formerly "cassia"), winter cassia, Christmas bush, money bush, and yellow candlewood. [2]
For Jenna Bush Hager, there's a certain tradition her family follows year after year and it has to do with the exact weekend they go to pick out their Christmas tree.
Ericameria nauseosa is a perennial shrub growing to 2 to 8 metres (6 + 1 ⁄ 2 to 26 feet). [3] The leaves, depending on the subspecies, are 2–7.5 centimetres (3 ⁄ 4 –3 inches) long [4] and narrow to spatula-shaped.