Page:An account of a voyage to establish a colony at Port Philip in Bass's Strait.djvu/249

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.

( 224 )

No IV.


(Page 193.)

Observations on the various kinds of Timber found in New South Wales.


NEW South Wales produces a great variety of timber trees, to some of which the colonists have given names descriptive of their qualities, and others they call by the names of those trees which they most resemble either in leaf, in fruit, or in the texture of the wood. Among the former are the blue, red, and black butted gums, stringy and iron barks, turpentine and light wood; and among the latter are the she-oak, mahogany, cedar, box, honeysuckle, tea-tree, pear-tree, apple-tree, and fig-tree. These trees shed their bark annually at the fall of the year, and are always in foliage, the new leaves forcing off the old ones.

The blue and red gums are nearly of the same texture; they are very tough and strong, and in

ship-