Beemaster's International Beekeeping Forum
BEEKEEPING LEARNING CENTER => DOWN UNDER BEEKEEPING => Topic started by: Geoff on December 26, 2009, 08:42:08 pm
-
Beautiful tree For Buds pleasure
(http://img12.imageshack.us/img12/6670/261210001.th.jpg) (http://img12.imageshack.us/i/261210001.jpg/)
(http://img685.imageshack.us/img685/3040/261210003.th.jpg) (http://img685.imageshack.us/i/261210003.jpg/)
(http://img685.imageshack.us/img685/5034/261210002.th.jpg) (http://img685.imageshack.us/i/261210002.jpg/)
-
The leaves look like eucalyptus
-
You are in fact correct Annette. When Aussies speak of "gum" they dont mean the chewing kind, they mean eucalyptus
I was in the Gippsland area of Victoria a few years ago when the flowering gum were flowering and they are magnificant
Mick
-
Hi Annette,
Slicko is quite correct. The general populous do call all eucalypts 'gums'. I only learnt recently that there are different types of eucalypts, of which gum is only one of them. There are also: Iron Bark, Peppermint, Stringy Bark, Box, Wrinkled Bark and Mallee. Well at least these are the Victorian ones.
Then you have different species and varieties of each and of course they all produce different honey with distinct flavours and pollen of different quality. Yellow Box and Messmate (a stringy bark) are two of the most common.
Phil
-
Yes, I recognize the leaves, but I never saw flowers like that on our eucalyptus
-
And of course one of the reasons they are called gums is that if you carefully peel off the green from a leaf on some species you are left with a film of gum which when I was a kid you could hold it between your two thumbs and play like a musical instrument.
Well you could not play Waltzing Matilda and sing it at the same time :roll:
Slicko