Use in horticulture Many species of grevilleas are popular
garden plants, especially in Australia but also in other temperate and subtropical climates. Many grevilleas have a propensity to interbreed freely, and extensive hybridisation and selection of horticulturally desirable attributes has led to the commercial release of many named
cultivars. Among the best known is 'Robyn Gordon', a small shrub up to high and wide which can flower 12 months of the year in subtropical climates. The cultivar 'Canberra Gem' has gained the
Royal Horticultural Society's
Award of Garden Merit. They can be grown from soft tip
cuttings from December–March (in the Southern Hemisphere) or fresh
seed. Many harder-to-grow species can be grafted onto hardy rootstock such as
Grevillea robusta. There is an active Grevillea Study Group in the
Australian Native Plants Society for people interested in grevilleas, both for uses in horticulture and for conservation in the wild.''
Traditional Aboriginal use In Australia, many
Aboriginal peoples utilise grevilleas for a wide variety of uses, including food, medicine, tools and ceremonial purposes. Seeds from some species are used as food, such as from the prickly plume grevillea (
G. annulifera) of
Western Australia and rock grevillea or djamudu (
G. heliosperma) by the
Bardi people of the
Northern Territory. The most common and widespread use of grevillea as food among Aboriginal Australians is consuming the
nectar. Although some grevillea flowers contain toxic compounds, some species such as
G. eriostachya, G. juncifolia and
G. pteridifolia of northern and western Australia and
G. lanigera of south-eastern Australia are used. Flowers are either directly chewed and sucked or entire inflorescences are soaked in water to create a sweet, sugary drink.
Colonial furniture A grevillea
wood veneer was used on a
Pembroke table, a small table with two drawers and folding sides, made in the 1790s for Commissioner of the Royal Navy, Sir
Andrew Snape Hamond. The timber from which the veneer was made, referred to as 'beef wood', was sent from
Port Jackson by Surgeon-General
John White, who arrived in the new penal colony of Australia with the
First Fleet. This table is in the collection of the
National Museum of Australia in
Canberra. ==Gallery==