SCAEVOLA SPINESCENS Edible Native "Maroon Bush" 25cm
DESCRIPTIONS:
Scaevola Spinescens "Maroon Bush" is a hardy, evergreen shrub native to Australia, except Tasmania and Victoria. It is characterised by its prickly foliage, fan-shaped flowers, and a growth habit that can be use for hedging or even edible bonsai. It thrives in full sun to partial shade and prefers well-drained, fertile soil, but can tolerate sandy, salty, and dry conditions. The plants is also known for its medicinal properties, with Aboriginal communities traditionally using it to treat various ailments.
Appearance: Maroon Bush is a rigid, divaricate shrub that can grow up to 2 metres tall. Its branchlets are often spinose (prickly) and can be glabrous (smooth) or have branched scurfy hairs, giving them a greyish appearance when young. The leaves are typically clustered, Obovate to linear and have entire (smooth) margins.
Flowers : The flowers are solitary, borne in the leaf axils, and have slender stalks. They are typically white or cream coloured, sometimes with purple veins and have a distinctive fan-like shape.
Fruits: The fruits is an ovoid, fleshy structure that turns black or purplish when ripe.
Habitat and Distribution: This species is commonly found in drier areas of Australia, often on hillsides or stony sites. It is found in all mainland states except Victoria and Tasmania.
Adaptability: Maroon Bush is known for its resilience and ability to tolerate drought, sandy soil and some salinity. It can be use in a variety of landscaping applications, including scrub themed landscapes, hedgerows and even edible bonsai.
Medicinal uses: Aboriginal communities have traditionally used Maroon Bush for its medicinal properties, particularly in treating intestinal and urinary issues, cancer, kidney, general sickness and heart diseases.

