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[OM] Re: [OT] help any one know what's been eating at this floor and roo

Subject: [OM] Re: [OT] help any one know what's been eating at this floor and roof beams
From: Andrew Fildes <afildes@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Tue, 2 Oct 2007 07:10:07 +1000
Find a nice hollow branch of appropriate length and thickness, clean  
it up, make a mouthpiece out of resin and decorate.
Most large 'gum' trees of age are hollowed out by termites (white- 
anted). They eat the dead wood at the core and don't touch the live  
wood on the outside. Interestingly, this makes the tree stronger - a  
tube is stronger than a rod. Also the hollow trunks are habitat for  
bats, usually after the termite mud galleries are washed out (mud  
guts) and a fire or two has opened it up. 40% of forest large species  
use tree hollows as habitat - parrots and possums in particular  
usually where a branch has broken away and allowed rot to work down  
the hollowed stump. Each animal has it's preference for opening size,  
shape and angle.
The process takes around a hundred years for a fully mature habitat  
tree, which is why logging on an 80 year cycle (or 60 in Tasmania!)  
is a bloody disaster.
Andrew Fildes
afildes@xxxxxxxxxxxxx



On 02/10/2007, at 12:08 AM, Chuck Norcutt wrote:

> Thanks.  I always wondered how a digeridoo is made.



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