I need this tree........

Signed-In Members Don't See This Ad

Janster

Member
Joined
Nov 13, 2012
Messages
1,645
Location
Nevada
Rainbow Eucalyptus - This multicolored tree sports such a variety of hues because its bark breaks away at different times, thus allowing the tree to age (color) differently.

.... only a million or two blanks lie therein. Too bad beauty is only skin deep!
 

Attachments

  • 13f9fd006d404900a17504ce4fc55065.jpg
    13f9fd006d404900a17504ce4fc55065.jpg
    104.1 KB · Views: 206
Last edited:
Signed-In Members Don't See This Ad
Joined
Sep 18, 2013
Messages
775
Location
Childress, Texas
WOW! I looked up the properties of the Rainbow Eucalyptus tree and found the actual wood is not colored like the outer layer. Darn! That is one sweet picture though.
 

plantman

Member
Joined
Jan 2, 2012
Messages
3,437
Location
Green Bay, Wi
Jan; I have seen these trees in the gardens in Hawaii. It was hard to believe that there were that many vivid colors on one tree. But, alas, beauty was only skin deep !!! Jim S
 

BJohn

Member
Joined
Feb 13, 2014
Messages
820
Location
Cabot, Arkansas
How thick is the bark?

Have you ever seen some Mexican Plum? Saw a hollow form turned from a piece of it. Had some amazing colors to it. Not sure if it was natural or it picked the colors up from the soil that it was growing in.

A friend of ours has a wild cherry tree that he has been preserving, by sinking it in a pond. When he removes a piece form time to time it has absorbed minerals from the water and the pinkish color is amazing.
 

Kenny Durrant

Member
Joined
Sep 11, 2012
Messages
2,538
Location
Sachse Tx. 75048
I have use Birch Bark. I wraped it around the brass tube then cast it. I painted the tube black then rolled and cast. The black showed through the small holes in the bark and really looked cool. My northern friends loved them. I'm sure the trees a protected but if the tree has a thin bark it might work.
 
Top Bottom