Thursday, May 01, 2008

Tree in a Cage



(This is the third of a series of posts about a visit to Gardaland, a large theme park in the north of Italy.)


In the middle of Gardaland, there's a nine foot tree in a cage. One of the rides perhaps? Something like the Ents from Lord of the Rings or Harry Potter's Whomping Willow? Both good candidates for a theme park attraction I would have thought. But no, it's a real tree and it's not violent - it's a Wollemi Pine.

The Wollemi Pine is, in the wild, one of the rarest trees in the world. Only about a hundred trees remain (some sources say less), in a secret location in the Wollemi National Park, in Queensland Australia. Why so secret? For the same reason that this one was in a cage - to protect them from people. Who might inadvertently introduce disease, start fires and of course, rip off branches. Well, of course, if it's rare you've got to have a souvenir, haven't you?

It's also one of the oldest living plants. Fossil records date back 200 million years, and at the time the earth was covered by dense rain forest, it was found all over the world. But it was thought to have become extinct together with the dinosaurs.


When I saw the tree, my first thought was that it looked like a bright green Monkey Puzzle tree - it has the same long needles. And in fact, it's from the same family Araucariaceae (wow, I spelt that right first time.)

Discovered by chance in 1994 by one of the Wollemi Park rangers, David Noble (it has been given the official name of Wollemia nobilis), the tree is now the focus of a conservation attempt. While the original trees are being protected, they're now quite widely propagated and you cab see them in various botanical gardens around the world. In Kew Gardens in London, for instance. And even in theme parks.

You can also get one for the garden if you want. You'll need a bit of space, as they grow to over a hundred feet, but one site also pushes them as good container plants, claiming that they "can be maintained in a pot almost indefinitely". Perhaps I'll get one for the balcony. Though as they were only discovered in 1994 and have only been commercially available for a couple of years, I'd like to know how they know.

In the wild they grow in acid soil, and in humid rainforest conditions. However, they are apparently hardy, surviving at a range of -5° to 45°C (that's 23°-113°F). If you're in USDA zones 7-11, you should be fine.


There's plenty on the web about them if you want to know more. Just Google Wollemi Pine. One of the most interesting sites has the tapescript of an Australian Broadcasting Corporation documentary on the trees, called A Green Dinosaur. It's well worth a look. Or click here for a list of botanical gardens where they can be seen, and for distributors in various countries. The site for North America is here.

5 comments:

VP said...

I've been pondering buying one of these. If you buy one from Kew (with a hefty price tag) some of the £ goes towards conserving them in Australia.

I just can't bear the thought of squashing 1 in a pot when it really wants to be a very tall tree and I don't have an outdoor space of botanic garden proportions :(

Cheryl said...

That was really interesting Sue. I love learning about trees and I must admit to not knowing this one. Fabulous post.

Anonymous said...

Too cold here for one but how interesting. I once had a small Picea 'Horstman's Silberlocke' under a wire cage to protect it from the deer and I forgot to remove it during a garden tour. That was the one plant I had the most questions about so given that and this post, perhaps we should cage a few dandelions or something. That might be funny.

Green thumb said...

Thanks for the info about this very interesting tree. I had never heard about it before.

Garden Wise Guy said...

My guess is that the tree assumes zombie-like traits on full moon nights and the cage is there to protect US from IT!

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