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  • red river gums
  • RED river gums (1)
  • red river gums

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Red River Gum Painting

The river red gum Eucalyptus camaldulensis is the most widely distributed eucalyptus species in Australia growing along watercourses throughout the country.

It lines the Murray River for most of its length.

Two of my favourite features about the red river gum from an artist’s point of view:

  1. The trunk is vari-coloured, which includes patches of leaden grey bark above an area of brown-black.
  2. The branches are often twisted and the root system is often partly exposed.

It is the association with the water that makes the tree interesting. It needs periods of partial flooding where its trunk may be inundated for months. Seeds are washed to high ground during a flood and germinate to take root and grow before the next flood submerges the new tree.

Old rotten limb hollows, or broken branches, provide nesting hollows for galahs, sulphur-crested cockatoos, gang-gang cockatoos, cockatiels and various parrots.

The Aborigines used the tree for its medicinal properties. A handful of young leaves, crushed and then boiled in water, was used as a linament that was rubbed in for chest or joint pain, particularly for general aches and flu symptoms. Young leaves were also heated in a pit over hot coals, and the vapours were inhaled, which helped with the treatment of general sickness.

RED RIVER GUMS

Maureen Finck

AUD$800
Size: 91w x 76h x 3.75d cms
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Oil on stretched canvas

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Additional Information

Red River Gum Painting

The river red gum Eucalyptus camaldulensis is the most widely distributed eucalyptus species in Australia growing along watercourses throughout the country.

It lines the Murray River for most of its length.

Two of my favourite features about the red river gum from an artist’s point of view:

  1. The trunk is vari-coloured, which includes patches of leaden grey bark above an area of brown-black.
  2. The branches are often twisted and the root system is often partly exposed.

It is the association with the water that makes the tree interesting. It needs periods of partial flooding where its trunk may be inundated for months. Seeds are washed to high ground during a flood and germinate to take root and grow before the next flood submerges the new tree.

Old rotten limb hollows, or broken branches, provide nesting hollows for galahs, sulphur-crested cockatoos, gang-gang cockatoos, cockatiels and various parrots.

The Aborigines used the tree for its medicinal properties. A handful of young leaves, crushed and then boiled in water, was used as a linament that was rubbed in for chest or joint pain, particularly for general aches and flu symptoms. Young leaves were also heated in a pit over hot coals, and the vapours were inhaled, which helped with the treatment of general sickness.