SKU: 79535536741
silver dollar eucalyptus indoor plant

silver dollar eucalyptus indoor plant Eucalyptus cinerea

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Description

silver dollar eucalyptus indoor plant Eucalyptus cinereaEucalyptus cinerea Eucalyptus cinerea is the silver dollar eucalyptus, a fast growing Myrtaceae tree grown young for its round, glaucous juvenile leaves. The foliage appears in opposite pairs along the stems, giving young plants a neat paired arrangement with the cool grey blue surface that makes this species popular for pots and cut foliage. Although it is often bought as a compact plant, Eucalyptus cinerea is genetically a tree. In containers it

Eucalyptus cinerea

Eucalyptus cinerea is the silver dollar eucalyptus, a fast-growing Myrtaceae tree grown young for its round, glaucous juvenile leaves. The foliage appears in opposite pairs along the stems, giving young plants a neat paired arrangement with the cool grey-blue surface that makes this species popular for pots and cut foliage.

Although it is often bought as a compact plant, Eucalyptus cinerea is genetically a tree. In containers it needs strong light, airflow, careful watering and pruning to stay dense and leafy, because unpruned growth naturally stretches upward and begins moving toward a more adult structure.

What stands out on Eucalyptus cinerea

  • Evergreen eucalyptus in the Myrtaceae family, native to south-eastern Australia.
  • Juvenile leaves are rounded to broadly ovate, opposite, often stem-clasping and coated in a pale waxy bloom.
  • Commonly called silver dollar eucalyptus or Argyle apple.
  • Regular pruning keeps young plants producing rounded juvenile foliage.

Silver juvenile shoots and woody tree development

Eucalyptus cinerea develops fibrous bark and a woody framework as it matures. Young and coppiced shoots carry the rounded silver leaves, while older growth can produce narrower adult foliage. This juvenile-to-adult shift is normal for eucalyptus and is the reason young plants respond best to deliberate pruning before stems become long and sparse.

The species is native to SE New South Wales and NE Victoria, where it grows as a tree in open, bright conditions. Its waxy, aromatic foliage and woody roots suit high light and sharp drainage more than enclosed, low-light indoor corners. A potted plant stays leafier indoors when placement is very bright.

Light, watering and pruning for silver dollar growth

  • Light: Give the brightest position available, ideally several hours of direct sun after acclimation. Weak light quickly leads to long internodes and sparse growth.
  • Water: Water deeply, then allow the upper part of the mix to dry before watering again. Small pots can dry quickly, while stagnant water around the roots causes decline.
  • Substrate: Use a mineral-rich, fast-draining mix with bark, pumice, lava rock or coarse perlite. The roots need oxygen around the root ball.
  • Pot choice: Use a pot with drainage holes and enough weight to balance the woody stems. Eucalyptus roots dislike frequent disturbance, so repot before the plant becomes severely root-bound.
  • Temperature: Bright, cool to moderate conditions are better than warm, dark interiors. Avoid placing the plant next to dry heat sources.
  • Pruning: Trim in spring or active growth to keep juvenile shoots coming. Cut above leaf nodes and avoid stripping too much foliage from a weak plant at once.
  • Feeding: Feed lightly during active growth. Excess fertiliser can push soft, stretched growth when light is limited.

Growth and foliage warning signs

  • Long, thin stems: Increase light and prune lightly once the plant is actively growing. Stretched eucalyptus growth usually points to low light.
  • Crisp leaves: Check for underwatering, a very small pot, hot dry air or sudden sun exposure after shade. Rehydrate evenly and adjust placement gradually.
  • Yellowing or dull leaves: Inspect drainage and root condition. Wet, airless substrate can damage young eucalyptus roots.
  • Leaf drop after repotting: Keep conditions bright and stable. Disturbed roots need even moisture and time to resume uptake.

Safety around pets and cut foliage

Eucalyptus species are toxic to dogs, cats and horses if ingested, with the essential oil compound eucalyptol listed as the main toxic principle. Keep leaves, pruned stems and dried foliage away from pets and children, and avoid using eucalyptus oils around animals.

Botanical name background

Eucalyptus cinerea is an accepted species in Myrtaceae. The genus name Eucalyptus comes from Greek roots meaning “well covered”, referring to the cap-like cover over the flower bud. The species epithet cinerea means ashen, matching the pale waxy coating on the leaves, buds and fruit.

Rounded juvenile shoots and waxy silver leaves give Eucalyptus cinerea its familiar silver dollar profile for pots and cut foliage.

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Jessyka
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★★★★★ 5
Convenient non-toxic option
Exactly what I was looking for. Non-toxic convenient option for sunblock. I keep one in my purse, our outdoor bag and in the car. Rubs in easy no weirdness. We are light complected so I'm not sure if it would leave white cast on a darker skin tone. I use it daily on my face, ears and hands.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2026
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AA
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 3
Mineral sunscreen stick review - poor at blending
I’m writing a review for this product as well as a number of other mineral sunscreen sticks (MSS) after testing a bunch of them—scroll down to point #6 below if you want to know which one I thought was the best. I’ve placed this exact review on every single other MSS I used. I specifically elected to go with mineral-based sunscreens—lots of talk on the environmental effects of the other sunscreens (not sure how much of this is actually true, but I’m willing to avoid the non-mineral sunscreens given the minimal investment on my part). Here are a few important points about this review: 1. No one paid me to write this review. I put down my own $140 to get all 13 of these MSSs. I just wanted to find the best one by limiting as much bias as possible. Yes, my wife definitely gave me the you’re-crazy-but-I-guess-I’m-stuck-now look. 2. Quick sunscreen tutorial. Most dermatologists say we should try to get an SPF of 30+. Each 1% of zinc counts for 1.6 SPF, so to hit SPF 30, your zinc has to be 18.75%+. Each 1% of titanium counts for 2.6 SPF, so a combination of zinc and titanium could get you to SPF 30 as well. Titanium apparently isn’t good enough to block UV-A (cancer causing and photo-aging) light on its own, so you must add zinc to it. I calculated the SPF based on the stated zinc and titanium percentages on the label and these calculations were usually different from the quoted SPFs (they might be adding more SPFs from other ingredients, but I can’t say for sure). Nine of the 13 MSSs had calculated SPFs 30+. Only 4 of the 13 had a calculated SPF greater than or equal to the label SPF. 3. Because I can’t judge cancer prevention or aging blockade in the short term, avoiding burns and eye irritation are the most important immediately observable elements of an MSS. Every MSS I tested did equally well in burn avoidance and eye irritation avoidance. 4. It should be noted that I’m not Caucasian, I’m South Asian. If you don’t know what that is exactly, Wikipedia it or watch some Russell Peters standup comedy (his old stuff, not his new stuff). My skin color is probably similar to that of Benjamin Bratt (mind you, we’re talking about his skin color only… I’m not even in the same galaxy of overall looks as he is, much to my wife’s chagrin). The ability of a white-colored MSS to blend is crucial for me. And yes, even brown people like me need sunscreen. It would absolutely suck for me as a South Asian to have a higher risk of heart disease, diabetes, and hypertension, skillfully dodge those bullets with diet and exercise and luck, only to get taken out by skin cancer. 5. I like most scents. It seems like so many things are going unscented now—an MSS that is truly unscented is okay, but a lot of things labeled “unscented,” actually have an odd, unpleasant (sort of like bad oatmeal) smell to them. The scent score is logged as a “3” if it’s truly unscented, a “5” if it has a great scent, and a “1” if it smells bad. 6. Here’s the final conclusion. Only 3 of the 13 MSSs I tested had the following combination of characteristics: calculated SPF 30+, smell score 3+, and blend score 4+. These top three were: Neutrogena Sheer Zinc, Aveeno Positively Mineral, and Blue Lizard. When you factor in cost, it’s a no-brainer—Neutrogena and Aveeno were only half the cost of Blue Lizard. Therefore, my two winners (tied for first place) are Neutrogena Sheer Zinc and Aveeno Positively Mineral. Honorable mention for Blue Lizard—twice as expensive as the others, but might be slightly easier to maneuver on your face given the smaller size stick (this is a stretch compliment for Blue Lizard—I think NSZ and APM are just better). Hope this helps you select your next mineral sunscreen stick! A^2
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Reviewed in the United States on July 12, 2020
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Maria Eugenia vivas alba
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★★★★★ 5
Muy práctico
Este protector solar es muy bueno es orgánico y a pesar q es pequeño rinde mucho y protege mucho es muy práctico usarlo en barra
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Reviewed in the United States on February 24, 2026
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Angela C
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 5
Perfect for the melanin-less crowd!
Style: SPF 15, Size: 8 Fl Oz (Pack of 1)
This is my go to brand. I’m pasty white and burn easily, but not with this! It’s long lasting and smells great too!
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Reviewed in the United States on June 5, 2026
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benjamin bannister
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Good For Faster Tanning
Style: SPF 15, Size: 8 Fl Oz (Pack of 1)
This is a terrific sunscreen for those looking to tan faster. It's not as low as 8 SPF, or as high as the minimum recommended 30 SPF, but it'll get you darker faster. Apply this 15 minutes before going in the sun, and reapply every two hours. As someone who recently went to Hawaii and got 2-3 hours of sun every other day for two weeks, reapplying is absolutely crucial. We went once and reapplied after three hours, and that gave us some pain. Not as much pain as not reapplying at all, but it definitely taught us to reapply no matter what, if you are in the sun. Overall, this applied cleanly and protected our skin about 93%. And 93% is better than not wearing any sunscreen at all.
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