Tag Archives: local trees

Eucalyptus Sideroxylon dye pot

I went into the city to hear a presentation the other week, and on the way back there were so many opportunities to harvest that I couldn’t help but pull my bike over and pick some E Sideroxylon (Red Ironbark) leaves.  Yes, I did get a few looks… but I am reasonably impervious!

I picked a little on the main road out of the city beside the parklands, and a little more as I turned off onto my bike path.  As I exited the bike path, there was a big branch lying underneath a nice specimen near the tram line.  I have dyed from that specific tree before and the leaves were already dry.  I went back for more later.  So here is what I could get home on my bike rack, with my drum carder beside it for scale:

And here are some of the flowers.  There is one of these trees in full bloom next door to my house and there are lorikeets and honeyeaters feasting on these flowers in next door’s back yard calling to each other all day long at the moment.  I love it.

I decided to continue with the dye bath from earlier that week (the one in the post from September 18) rather than using fresh water.  The wool I dyed in the previous incarnation of the dye bath was not a really impressive colour, so it has returned to the pot and I’ve added a little more.  When I strained out the leaves and bark from the last pot, the water was a deep wine red.  This is unusual and I wonder if it is a result of leaving iron pipe in that bath–but if it is, I can’t figure out why the wool in that dye bath was still orange and tan.  The mystery continues…

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Neighbourhood dye plant for this week

This is another of my favourite dye plants, and another Eucalypt that is as-yet-identified.  It has very fine leaves and a lovely weeping habit. I’ve used it to create tablecloths with leaf prints cascading across them.

For much of the year the trunk is white to grey, and then as it enters the period of the year when it sheds its bark, pinks and reds begin to appear. It looks like I’ll be visiting again soon to collect bark.

When I visited today there were several generations of fruit as well as white flowers on the tree. I had a very funny visit to this tree last year.  I pulled over on my bike and was harvesting when people pulled up in the driveway next to it.  I greeted them, since there was no way to pretend this wasn’t happening.  They were glad I was trimming the tree and explained that they thought the council should be pruning it more diligently.  I offered to come back and prevent it hanging over the footpath and they were enthusiastic, so I came back with a friend, secateurs, a chook food sack and a milk crate a few days later.  Very funny!  There was I being selective and taking little… until we went back and took a sackful of leaves, which have lasted through the winter.

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Neighbourhood dyeplants.. and the odd sock

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I have finally finished a few pairs of socks that I’ve been carrying around for weeks…  these were dyed with black beans (the blue yarn) and purple carrots (the greyer yarn).  I gave them random cables and I like the effect.  Happily, so does the recipient!

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Today I went round to visit my all time favourite neighbourhood dye plant.  I lived in the street this tree grows in for years, and I adopted the tree under a council programme–not that this made me any more fond of it than I already was.  I have had rust through to burgundy colours on wool from the leaves and bark of this tree.  Over the last year or two I have propagated native plants to grown under it (saltbush, mostly), planted them and mulched the tree to keep the weeds down.  My Dad even got in on this, offering me seedlings and cuttings from his garden and collecting saltbush seed for me.  I was surprised to discover that saltbush was so easy to propagate from seed when the weather was warm.  Dad seemed to take it for granted I would be able to do this! I have about 50 more little plants that have stayed tiny all winter but will soon spring into growth ready to be planted around my suburb.

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I’ve been weeding around this tree for years in an effort to stop the council spraying poison into the neighbourhood.  I’ve been collecting rubbish from round the neighbourhood, and especially this tree, too.  I like this tree a lot.  Piping shrikes nested in it several years running.  Kookaburras sometimes sit in it and laugh.  Little birds come through it often, and white ants have unfortunately made homes here too.  Someone has put a bird box in it in the last year, but I haven’t seen an occupant yet.

Anyways, today I weeded, cleared rubbish and then applied bunting.  The Royal Show starts in a day or two and people will park in the streets all round this tree and walk through the patch we have been busy revegetating to get to their cars after dark.  In the past,  I have occasionally been dispirited to have quite a few of my little saltbushes pulled out by the roots or casually squashed as people pass through and plant guards thrown away.  I thought bunting might at least cut down on accidental damage.

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Over the time I’ve been working on growing things under this tree (and collecting bark and leaves!) people passing by have gone from quizzical to interested to pulling over in their cars or stopping with their dogs to thank me.  I think as the plants grow larger it is more obvious what I am doing and how lovely this otherwise weedy patch could be.  My friends have come along on mulch applying and watering missions, too.  It’s a blustery day, so I hope the bunting will make it!  The show runs over two weeks.  Here’s hoping most of the smaller plants make it to the end.  A cyclist came past while I was working, nodded and told me he thought the bunting was a good idea.  At least until the show is over, I’m thinking.

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Neighbourhood dye plants

Introducing one of my neighbourhood dye plants.  It is a Eucalyptus tree, but after many efforts, I still can’t say what specific kind of Eucalypt it is. I have books and I even have Euclid, but I am up against the limits of my own ignorance and the complexity of the task given the hundreds of different varieties of Eucalypt Australia has to offer.

But I can say that this tree is beautiful and that it gives rust-orange-maroon just depending on the method, whether I use leaves or bark, the ratio of plant material to fibre and my luck on the day.  Here it is, beside the tram track, with a close up of the trunk.  It is opposite number 23, Railway Tce South.  It branches so high up that I visit for fallen leaves after it has been really windy, but mostly I collect bark when it is peeling–later in the year.

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