2019 - OZ 8 Tingle Trees and Tree Walk
Met These 2 On Our Way to the Tingle Trees |
The Southwest of Australia has unique trees due to the frequent precipitation in the area. One of those ‘rare’ trees in Australia is the Red Tingle Tree (Eucalyptus Jacksonii), a giant of a tree. Somehow this tingle tree is picky about where it likes to grow. It picks gullies or hillsides and this tree even picks his neighbors. While it is a Eucalyptus tree, it has its own name because it has its own look, its own nationality so to speak. It prefers to be around Jarrah (see #4, Gnomesville) and/or Karri trees.
Tingle and Karri Trees |
View From the Top of the Tingle Tree Hill |
Large Tingle |
Wild fires had ravaged many of the trees we saw, yet the trees were sound. The burned out sections on some of the trees were so large, 100 people could congregate within its trunk. Somehow the Red Tingle Tree can cope with mild fires, a rarity for a tree.
Naturally each of those trees was very different from its neighbor, none looked alike. The woods, the grove we walked through is on the
National Register of Australia and
Other Side of the Previous Tingle |
(Don’t ask, yes I did)
The Giant Tingle - Huge |
Other Side of the Giant Tingle |
Who
would have thought? Well, famous for its trees, famous because there is not
much around Walpole.
Avenue of the Giants - Tingle and Karri Trees
Look For the Burned Out Tingle on the Left
Near the Beginning of the Video
Route of the Tingle Tree Walk |
A Long Way Down |
Remember the Red Tingle Tree likes hillsides, so the walk was built like a giant, complicated loop off a hillside, among the canopy of the Red Tingles. We were about 40 or 50 meters above ground level however and it was a phenomenal walk and yes, scary if you get anxiety about heights. The views were special; the forest around us primeval and the trees one of a kind. A good outing and a good find to visit the Tree Top Walk.
A Wobbly Walk
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