Think Winter isn't a great time for flowers? Think again. Winter has plenty of beauty to offer us, with lots of our most fragrant varieties available only during the cold months. From hardy stocks with their heady cinnamon scent, to flowering branches and textured seed pods, Winter for flowers is a unique season all of its own.

Once the night time temperature begins to drop, we lament the end of the warm days and prepare ourselves for the long Melbourne Winter. For seasonal florists, the change in weather means a whole new range of things to create with. Paniculata hydrangeas begin to self-preserve on the bush, wild fennel springs up in every spare urban space it can find, and we wave goodbye to the last of the garden roses.

But other things are beginning in nature. Erlicheer and jonquil bulbs start to pop up, buds form on the camellias, magnolias, blossoms and japonica, and by the end of the season they'll all be in full bloom. Native Australian and South African varieties are getting ready for their big moment, with flowers already forming on the proteas, coccineas, leucadendrons and blushing bride.

In June the first of the poppies come in beautiful bright pops of orange and yellow, along with indigenous woody pears and delicate heath. By July, the stock flowers are in full flush; pumping out big, fluffy blooms with the most amazing, spicy scent. Then come all varieties of banksia, from bright yellow to purply-pink, and spectacularly, the wattle flushes all over Melbourne, brightening up the Winter with its bright yellow florets and sweet fragrance.

This is also the only time of the year for classic fragrant favourites; violets, daphne, wintersweet, witch hazel, luculia, and at the very end of Winter; boronia and jasmine (jasmine also has a second flush in Summer). 

Our most spectacular native flower; the gymea lily, blooms around July, sending huge flower spikes up to 4 metres high into the air, with prehistoric-looking, deep wine-coloured flower heads that last for a month in the vase. So special are these giant beauties, that a growers licence is required to produce them, and limited numbers are available each year.

By August all of the camellia trees are heavy with blooms. Native thryptomene, eriostemon and waxflower are blooming, as well as hardy varieties like yellow bells, erica and phylica. The early blossoming prunus trees put on a show in pinks and whites, hinting at the warmer weather and new season to come.

With a never-ending procession of flowers coming in and out of bloom, these three months are definitely not boring in the cut flower world. If you are a lover of native or hardy varieties, or super fragrant flowers, winter should be your favourite season! It's definitely one of ours. It's also a fabulous time of year for bright flowers which are very much needed here in Melbourne during those cold days.

Although Winter is definitely not our favourite time of the year, we are lucky as florists and flower lovers to experience it. Many of our friends that live further north to do not get to enjoy lots of these varieties, as they either do not grow at all, or will not transport well interstate.

As a final note (if you are a florist reading this), the varieties we've listed are obviously not everything that is available, there are definitely other flowers blooming during this 3 month period. But, this is Botany's winter list, which means if you are a florist keen to ditch single use plastics, you will be able to find all of the varieties here un-sleeved.

So why not bookmark this list as a helpful resource for next season, and use only these winter beauties for all your creations? Not only will you help contribute to a reduction in the need and demand for flowers in single-use plastic sleeves, you will be creating a more sustainable industry at the same time!

We are all powered by the choices we make, so thank you to everyone that continues to support Botany, you are a very much appreciated part of our vision to shake the waste from the cut flower industry!

Full list of winter flowering blooms available single-use plastic free during Winter:

Abelia

Allium (giant)

Andromeda

Banksia

Berzillia

Blossom

Blushing bride

Boronia

Bracken fern

Bud flowering gum

Bud wax

Butterfly Bush

Calendula

Camellia

Coccinea

Corokia

Daffodils

Daphne

Erica

Eriostemon

Erlicheer

Fennel (wild foraged)

Firewheels

Gladioli

Gumnuts

Gymea

Hakea

Heath

Hellebores

Hot pokers

Ivy Berry

Japonica

Jasmine

Jonquils

Kale

Kangaroo Paw

Leucodendron

Lily Pilly

Magnolia

Millet dried

Nandina

Phylica

Poppies

Prickly pear

Protea

Ranunculus

Rhododendron

Stocks

Straw Flower

Sweet William

Thryptomene

Violets

Wattle

Wattle pods (wild foraged)

Waxflower

Winter sweet

Witch hazel

Woody Pear

Woolly Bush

Yellow Bells