I have felt for a couple of months that things have been flowering early this year and this was confirmed when John Rando rang last night to say he'd pruned the fruit trees in Nobelius Park and said in his opinion the trees were close to a month in advance of a normal year. As a man who worked 30 years as a pruner in a commercial apple orchard I accept what he says.
I have a museum meeting today and much else to do so I'll copy and paste from Word my Gembrook column for Signpost for September which I just submitted after starting on it first thing, so as to give my blog readers something. I don't think Signpost readers read my blog, with maybe one or two exceptions, and no one will mind I'm sure.
AMONGST THE GUM TREES
I heard a conversation in the post office where a man said to his friend, “I can’t understand why Australians call all eucalypts gum trees when the rest of the world knows them as eucalypts. Do you know the origin of it?”
His friend replied, “No I don’t. I always thought of them as eucalypt gums.”
At this point I nearly joined in to say it baffles me also, and that eucalypts are broadly grouped by bark type e.g. Stringybarks, Box, Ironbarks and Bloodwoods. It’s the smooth barked types such as Mountain grey Gums, Manna Gums and Red Gums that are “gums”. I didn’t, because I didn’t know the answer to question, the origin of “gum tree”.
So I researched to find that Eucalyptus is one of three similar genera that are commonly referred to as ‘eucalypts’, the others being Corymbia and Angophora. They are known as gum trees because many species, but not all, exude copious sap from any break in the bark. There are more than 700 species of Eucalyptus, 15 found outside Australia, only 9 not occurring in Australia. Interestingly, two of our best known gums, the Red Flowering Gum and the Ghost Gum, are Corymbias.
There are other eucalypts types such as Mallees, Ash and Peppermints. Generally speaking our knowledge of our native trees could be improved and perhaps could be given more emphasis in the education system. It may have improved since my day.
On the bird front, John Batten told me recently that red browed finches had visited his garden, and he’d seen many water birds in the dams in Harewood Rd. Alan Bates observed magpies harassing and squawking at an unconcerned low flying wedge tailed eagle. The galahs that regularly come and go have been plentiful and smooching in pairs perched on the electricity wires, the whip birds have moved back to our street for the spring, resuming their male/ female calling, and I saw what I think was a spotted pardalote.
Monday, August 15, 2011
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