Plants of South Eastern New South Wales
Veronica perfoliata
Digger's speedwell
Plantaginaceae
Forest, woodland, heath, alpine herbfields, rocky slopes and screes, and stream banks and drainage lines. Widespread. Rarely coastal.
Woody herb or shrub to 1.2 m high or sprawling, dying back to the base after each flowering season. Shoots sometimes overwinter. Hairless and often glaucous. Several stems arise from a narrow woody rootstock or from clumps originating in short rhizomes. Leaves opposite each other, usually 1.5–6 cm long, 7–40 mm wide, bases joined together and completely surrounding the stem, or cordate or wedge-shaped, margins entire or finely scalloped or with up to about 10 pairs of shallow or coarse pointed teeth, tips pointed. Flowers blue or purplish/violet blue, 5–12 mm long, 9-12 mm in diameter, with a short tube and 4 spreading lobes. Style and ovary hairless. Stamens 2. Flower clusters 10–45 cm long, usually 25–70-flowered. Flowering:spring-summer.
Family was Scrophulariaceae.
Was Parahebe perfoliata, then Derwentia perfoliata.
All native plants on unleased land in the ACT are protected.
PlantNET description: http://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Veronica~perfoliata (accessed 8 February, 2021)
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