Tasmanian oak refers to three eucalypt species commonly found in tasmania as well as alpine regions in victoria and nsw.
Tasmanian hardwood trees.
Tasmanian timber marketed as tasmanian oak or tassie oak is most often a combination of three distinct species of tree all of which are found most often in you guessed it tasmania and while they are all certainly similar there is a wide amount of variation between the three.
Image thanks to tourism tasmania garry moore.
Tasmania with its unique geography and environment has some of the finest cool temperate hardwood forests in the world and an expanding hardwood and softwood plantation estate.
However this defining group of giants is all but unknown to most tasmanians.
Giant trees are more than 85 metres tall or 280 cubic metres in volume according to sustainable timber tasmania formerly forestry tasmania.
Tasmania is home to the tallest hardwood trees in the world and many of them are considered to be giants.
Most commonly made from a combination of alpine ash mountain ash and messmate tasmanian oak flooring is characterised by the commonalities between all three species.
Tasmanian oak a strong durable hardwood used in all classes of building flooring and internal work.
Both species have been selected for high growth rates and desirable wood properties.
Tasmanian oak is light in colour varying from straw to reddish brown with intermediate shades of cream to pink.
This mix of hardwood species ranges from straw blonde to pale and dark pink through to chocolate blonde.
The island state is one of just a few places on the planet where they reach such sizes.
The younger growth tends to be lighter in colour while the older trees can be darker across the spectrum.
The forresters who found the tree named it centurion after a commander of a century 100 soldiers in the ancient roman army.
Obliqua mountain ash alpine ash messmate.
Has light colour and is well suited to finishing with stain to match existing timber work.
Described as the epicentre of tasmanian tall trees the andromeda stand is internationally recognised as the tallest grove of flowering trees on earth and is the finest example of ultra tall eucalypt forest in the world.
Using only the soil sunlight water and carbon dioxide from the air these forests produce some of the strongest and most beautiful timbers in the world.
Tasmanian oak can be one of e.
These hardwood species are large trees that grow up to 90 metres in height.
Tasmanian oak mountain gum white top rose gum flooded gum white mahogany yellow stringybark spotted gum blackbutt ironbark grey red broad leaved narrow leafed bloodwood brown pale red sydney blue gum white gum kwila merbau.