Burdekin Plum

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Dai Sensei

Member
Joined
Jan 14, 2009
Messages
482
Location
Gold Coast Queensland Australia
I was at one of our local timber market shows the other day and picked up a branch of some Burdekin Plum (on left). This timber is pretty rare as the tree is a sacred bush-tucker tree here for the local aborigines. I cut a length of to see what it was like and then cut that into some pen blanks, some normal and others cross-cut. It was amazing with browns, reds and blacks.

Although the cross-cuts blanks were a pain to turn, and I destroyed a few blanks in the process, the Rhodium Jr Gent 3 and Sierra click turned out great with amazing Chatoyance. Mind you, the other Sierra click is in normal cut, and also looks pretty good.

They are all finished CA and look great to me, wish I could have bought more, but I still have enough for around another 30-40 blanks.

Cheers
 

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markgum

Member
Joined
Apr 8, 2008
Messages
3,825
Location
Keenesburg, CO
beutiful set of pens there. That is some nice looking wood. Will have to add that to my list to search for.
 

nava1uni

Member
Joined
Mar 30, 2008
Messages
4,936
Location
San Francisco, CA, USA.
The grain is amazing and the pens and workmanship are beautiful. Do the aborigines make things from the wood, like carvings, etc? Where in Australia does it grow and is it a fruit tree that provides fruit.?
 

Fred

Member
Joined
Feb 18, 2007
Messages
3,557
Location
N.E. Atlanta, Georgia U.S.A.
Nice pens and great job on the finishing of them.

Now, what is a "bush-tucker", or do I really just need to avoid one/all of those creatures?

BTW, you say it is a sacred tree ... How has your 'sleep-time' been since cutting it? Noticed any weirdness about you lately! :eek:
 
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