Eucalyptus blakelyi

Eucalyptus blakelyi, known as Blakely's red gum,[3] is a tree endemic to eastern Australia.

It has smooth bark on its trunk and branches, dull bluish green, lance-shaped adult leaves, flower buds usually in groups of seven, white flowers and cup-shaped to hemispherical fruit.Eucalyptus blakelyi is a tree that grows to a height of 20–25 metres (66–82 ft) and forms a lignotuber.

The bark on the trunk and branches is smooth, pale grey, cream-coloured and white with patches of other colours.

[3][4][5][6][7][8] Eucalyptus blakelyi was first formally described in 1917 by Joseph Maiden from a specimen collected in the Pilliga scrub by Harald Jensen.

[10] Blakely's red gum grows in woodland and open forest, mainly on the tablelands of New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory but also in the far south-east of Queensland and north-eastern Victoria.

flower buds
fruit