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Chocolate Lily

Wurundjeri name unknown

Arthropodium strictum

The chocolate lily is a flowering plant which grows from 0.2 to 1.2 metres tall with violet flowers from September to December. Their name comes from these flowers' chocolate-like smell.

The Wurundjeri-woiwurrung cook and eat this plant's tubers.

It grows in well drained soil in full sun to semi shade.

OBS Aus Native Garden.jpg
Acacia-dealbata-in-flower.jpg

Takver from Australia, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Green Spaces

Here are some spaces around Melbourne we've found this plant!

Acknowledgement of Country

The University of Melbourne and the sites listed on this website are located on unceded land belonging to the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung and Boonwurrung peoples of the Kulin nation, and we pay our respects to the traditional custodians of the land. As students of the University of Melbourne, we benefit from the continued effects of colonisation. We also recognise that decolonisation is a necessary and active process all must participate in, and we hope that the Native Garden Project can highlight ways that our communities have and can contribute to the physical decolonisation of the land. This always was and always will be Aboriginal land.

An Arts Discovery Research Project

By Charlie Bamford, Finn B, Thomas Delany, Oskar Lelia, Lee North-Connor and Flynn Slater

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