By Geoff Holloway
Brigalow (Acacia harpophylla) is a medium sized tree to 25 metres, grows in the brigalow belt from northern NSW to north Queensland including inland and coastal areas.
A long lived slow growing acacia, heavily logged early in the 20th Century for building materials (readily split into slabs), locally there are still stands of Brigalow on the slopes around Rosewood, easily identifiable because of the silvery top canopies of sickle shaped leaves and deep fissured dark bark which helps it to survive bushfires.
The wood is dense, dark reddish-brown heartwood (1025kg/m3) with a thin yellow sapwood, used in mining, construction, furniture, walking sticks, fishing rods and turning although hard on tools it finishes well and takes a high polish. The Aboriginal used the wood for spears, boomerangs and nulla nullas.


More in Local Trees Series

Black Bean

Black Tea Tree

Blue Gum or Forest Red Gum

Blue Quandong

Brigalow

Bunya Pine

Burdekin Plum

Coastal Cypress

Crow’s Ash or Australian Teak

Hoop Pine

Ivory Curl or Spotted Silky Oak

Macadamia

Moreton Bay Fig

Paperbark or Weeping Paperbark

Queensland Kauri Pine

Red Ash or Soap Tree

Red Bottlebrush

River Sheoak

Rose Sheoak

Rosewood

Sally Wattle

Southern Silky Oak

Spotted Gum

Tallowwood

Tuckeroo






