Historic Herbig Tree

Herbig Tree

River red gum (Eucalyptus camaldulensis Dehnh.) of unusual cone form, circumference 15.28 m, height just 14.0 m. The enormous hollow in the tree was used by Friedrich Herbig and his family as a home in 1855.

Old Bottle Butt

Stoutest known red bloodwood (Corymbia gummifera), circumference 17.5 m (16.3 m?), height 52 m.

Reynolds Falls

Reynolds Falls in Tasmania

Beautiful waterfall on Vale River. Waterfall is in a narrow gorge and falls with a single, more than 50 m tall plunge from a narrow canyon.

Kermandie Queen

Stoutest eucalyptus – a mountain ash (Eucalyptus regnans F.Muell.). Circumference 21.65 m, height 60 m. Suffered burns during the fire in January 2019.

Whitelaw Tree

Largest and also stoutest shining gum (Eucalyptus nitens H.Deane & Maiden). 57.5 m high, girth 14.9 m, volume 200 m³.

Moreton Bay Fig in Bellingen

Giant fig tree – Moreton Bay Fig (Ficus macrophylla Desf. ex Pers.) with a girth of 18 m, 50 m high. In fact these are two trees together – if their trunks are measured together, circumference is 29 m, but 18 m is the circumference of the largest tree.

Styx Valley Alpine Ash

Largest alpine ash (Eucalyptus delegatensis R.T.Baker) with a code name SX19A. Volume 286 m³, diameter 5.41 m, height 72.0 m.

Gothmog

Largest Australian oak (Eucalyptus obliqua L’Hér.). Volume 337 m³. 53 m high, diameter 5.37 m, girth – 17 m. The tree has many branches.