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Black maire (Nestegis cunninghamii) is a tall handsome canopy tree with a stout straight trunk growing up to 23 m high. Now found only in isolated North Island forests. The long leaves are leathery but smaller in adult trees. Black maire has dense, even-grained timber, dark brown in colour and often streaked with black and is very hard. The bark is rough and corky. Red fruits (sometimes yellow) are profuse, giving the tree a bright yellow glow. Maori used it for digging sticks and mallets, and as wedges for splitting wood. In the 1900s boatbuilders also favoured black maire timber for their mallets. Black maire burns slowly with great heat, and between the 1920s and 1960s most accessible stands were felled for firewood. The timber was also used for framing railway carriages and machinery, and building bridges, flooring, weatherboards, some furniture In recent years windfallen or recycled maire is used it has been used for wood-turning and specialist items such as golf-putter heads and woodwind instruments. | Black maire (Nestegis cunninghamii) is a tall handsome canopy tree with a stout straight trunk growing up to 23 m high. Now found only in isolated North Island forests. The long leaves are leathery but smaller in adult trees. Black maire has dense, even-grained timber, dark brown in colour and often streaked with black and is very hard. The bark is rough and corky. Red fruits (sometimes yellow) are profuse, giving the tree a bright yellow glow. Maori used it for digging sticks and mallets, and as wedges for splitting wood. In the 1900s boatbuilders also favoured black maire timber for their mallets. Black maire burns slowly with great heat, and between the 1920s and 1960s most accessible stands were felled for firewood. The timber was also used for framing railway carriages and machinery, and building bridges, flooring, weatherboards, some furniture In recent years windfallen or recycled maire is used it has been used for wood-turning and specialist items such as golf-putter heads and woodwind instruments. | ||
A Nestegis cunninghamii with the typical broad rounded crown growing on Honeysuckle Flat on the Te Henui Walkway. [ | A Nestegis cunninghamii with the typical broad rounded crown growing on Honeysuckle Flat on the Te Henui Walkway. [[File:Nestegis cunninghamii black maire.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]] | ||
The branch structure<br /> | The branch structure<br /> | ||
[ | [[File:Nestegis cunninghamii black maire-001.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]] | ||
[ | [[File:Nestegis cunninghamii Black maire.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]] | ||
Close up of the top surface of a leaf<br /> | Close up of the top surface of a leaf<br /> | ||
[ | [[File:Nestegis cunninghamii black maire-007.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]] | ||
Mid-rib is sunken in a shallow grove at the base of the leaf.<br /> | Mid-rib is sunken in a shallow grove at the base of the leaf.<br /> | ||
[ | [[File:Nestegis cunninghamii black maire-004.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]] | ||
The underside of a leaf.<br /> | The underside of a leaf.<br /> | ||
[[File:Nestegis cunninghamii black maire-005.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]] | |||
The green fruit (late April, Taranaki). They turn red but sometimes turn yellow.<br /> | The green fruit (late April, Taranaki). They turn red but sometimes turn yellow.<br /> | ||
[ | [[File:Nestegis cunninghamii Black maire-002.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]] | ||
[ | [[File:Nestegis cunninghamii Black maire-003.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]] | ||
The trunk<br /> | The trunk<br /> | ||
[ | [[File:Nestegis cunninghamii black maire-002.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]] | ||
Thanks to Wikipedia for text and information: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ | Thanks to Wikipedia for text and information: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ | ||
Latest revision as of 15:22, 24 September 2019
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family:Oleaceae
Tribe: Oleeae
Genus: Nestegis
Species: N cunninghamii
Scientific name: Nestegis cunninghamii
Common name: Black maire
Black maire (Nestegis cunninghamii) is a tall handsome canopy tree with a stout straight trunk growing up to 23 m high. Now found only in isolated North Island forests. The long leaves are leathery but smaller in adult trees. Black maire has dense, even-grained timber, dark brown in colour and often streaked with black and is very hard. The bark is rough and corky. Red fruits (sometimes yellow) are profuse, giving the tree a bright yellow glow. Maori used it for digging sticks and mallets, and as wedges for splitting wood. In the 1900s boatbuilders also favoured black maire timber for their mallets. Black maire burns slowly with great heat, and between the 1920s and 1960s most accessible stands were felled for firewood. The timber was also used for framing railway carriages and machinery, and building bridges, flooring, weatherboards, some furniture In recent years windfallen or recycled maire is used it has been used for wood-turning and specialist items such as golf-putter heads and woodwind instruments.
A Nestegis cunninghamii with the typical broad rounded crown growing on Honeysuckle Flat on the Te Henui Walkway.
Close up of the top surface of a leaf
Mid-rib is sunken in a shallow grove at the base of the leaf.
The green fruit (late April, Taranaki). They turn red but sometimes turn yellow.
Thanks to Wikipedia for text and information: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/