Eucalyptus populnea (Bimble or Poplar Box), Australia

Found on grassy woodland slopes and plains of inland New South Wales and Queensland, the Bimble Box is a tree that grows to about 20 metres tall, with a spread of about 5 metres, and is sometimes multi-trunked. The bark is rough on all but the smallest branches or on the trunk and larger branches, fibrous-flaky (‘box’), grey to grey-brown, often with whitish patches. It sheds in small ribbons.
The distinctive leaves give it its common name of poplar box. The leaves are broadly lanceolate, elliptic, ovate or rhomboidal and 5 – 11cm long, glossy and the same colour both sides.
The flowers are white, and mature flower buds are 3-5 mm long, with caps shorter than the base. Flower clusters 4 to more than 15 flowers, forming large clusters, at the ends of the stems or sometimes at the bases of the leaves. They flower in the autumn-summer.



