149 



CALLITRIS GLAUCA, R.Br. — Botanical Survey of Species (continued). 



Locality. 



County. 



Remarks. 



Cassilis 



Clareval, Stroud 



Clear Hills, Daysdale 

 Cocomingla, Cowra . 



Condoboliu 

 Coon amble 



Cootamundra 



Cowra 



Cullenbone 

 Daysdale 



Denman 

 Digilah... 



Bligh ... 



Gloucester 



Urana . . . 

 Monteagle 



Cunningham 



Leichhardt 



Harden 



Monteagle 



Wellington 

 Hume . . . 



Brisbane 

 Lincoln 



There are patches of considerable extent in different 

 parts of this district covered for the most part 

 by pine trees. They keep to the poor and 

 sandy country. (H. W. Smith.) 



The Cypress grows in a brush with beech and 

 varieties of the fig, covering an area about 

 7 miles long by 3 wide. 



Resin. — Neither of the two varieties exude a suffi- 

 cient quantity of resin to be of any commercial 

 value. (A. McLennan.) 



7,000 acres ; covering about two-thirds of the 

 country side. (L. E. Fraser.) 



The White or Silver Pine is not so common as the 

 Red or Cypress Pine (C. calcarata) in the 

 mountains in this district, but it is the principal 

 sort found on the level country, both sides of 

 the Lachlan, for hundreds of miles into the 

 interior. (Alex. Elliott.) 



2,500 acres. 



Timber. — Height, 40 feet ; diameter, 14 to 20 inches. 



Resin. — Plentiful. (H. J. Browne.) 



In the district there are seventeen forest reserves, 

 aggregating 486,700 acres, which embrace nearly 

 one- tenth of the pine-bearing area. Not found 

 immediately on the Castlereagh River more than 

 say 15 miles below Coonamble, as the continuous 

 black-soil country commences at about that 

 distance. Thesupplyis practically inexhaustible. 

 The Geelmoy Scrub extends from Come-by- 

 Chance to Coonabarabran, about 60 miles, with 

 a width of 20 to 40 miles. The Big Monkey 

 Scrub from Gilgandra to below Bourbah. Smaller 

 scrubs are Nebra and Urawilkie holdings. 

 (E. H. Taylor, F. T. Berman.) 



Out towards the flat country the White Pine is met 

 with. A large area, embracing thousands of 

 acres, is to be met with extending from Bar- 

 medman, Temora, and Wyalong. 



Resin. — Copious flows from both varieties in hot 

 months of the year. (T. B. Mulligan, T. W. 

 Henry.) 



They are to be seen all sizes and heights, from the 

 size of a whip-handle and 2 feet high, up to 

 trees with a diameter of 2 ft. 6 in., and height 

 of 80 or 90 feet. 



Resin. — From every knot on the trunk, and score 

 or crack in the bark, the resin oozes out like 

 stalactites. When the trees have been ring- 

 barked, the gap that has been cut round them 

 becomes, in a short time, entirely filled up with 

 resin. (A. Elliott.) 



Interspersed with C. calcarata. (E. R. Langbridge.) 



There is very little gi'ound covered by pines now, 

 as most of the land is cleared. (L. R. Brown.) 



About 1,000 acres. (W. Johnson.) 



Common pine vexy plentiful. (H. A. Patrick.) 



