Took a ride to just out of Melbourne in search of acacia obtusifolia.
Found a nice patch with some massive old trees, but it broke my heart to see them in such an unhealthy state
we're talking 20 something year old trees
look at the size of this mother!




is believe this is the sign of flowering just about to start
according to WorldWideWattle they flower Nov-Jan, but the majority being in hotter NSW, so these are probably a month or so behind..

the spot had around 20 trees, with about five being at least 20 years old
what hurt was the fact that every single tree (except the bubs) had had significant amounts of lower trunk bark removed

the result being that the side of the tree where the bark was removed has completely died, all branches have no leaves or just dead leaves, the majority of the branches on the other side looked OK. I'm actually surprised they hadn't died completely, but i guess trees have their own survival mechanisms
something of concern though was that some of the more badly affected trees are exhibiting signs of unhealthiness on their phyllodes (i don't know what i'm talking about, but to me these didn't look too healthy)

If the fool who took the bark is reading this, you should have picked wisely and taken one large, older trees and stopped there. Plant a few trees for the life you took (elsewhere, perhaps even in Melbourne). The area is established and will continue to grow, IF people keep preservation in mind. From a large tree, you would have got far more bark than the amounts you took combined, and you wouldn't have put almost every single tree in the area at risk. If you found them, then you probably know the story of how the got there in the first place. This was an extremely flukey situation, please show a little more respect for these troopers
















