I have shared flora finds in Sea Acres National Park (Port Macquarie) before, but each time I walk there I see new things!
It’s not your typical rainforest, as it has pockets of eucalypts growing there too, no doubt from past weather events where trees fell and light was allowed in.

As you know, details attract me and while there are many palm strips caught on vines, this one looked so like washing hung out to dry that I had to share it.

Speaking of vines, I saw one very odd and striking vine here, that looks like lacquered and polished cane, but curving. It is apparently Flagellaria indica, Whip Vine or Supplejack.
Growing to about 15 metres, its parts had many uses amongst indigenous people, and birds love its white berries.

Right beside the boardwalk is this brightly coloured and quirkily shaped tree trunk. I looked it up in the Centre’s useful information books and it is a rainforest myrtle, Glossia bidwilii, Python Tree, so called for its blotchy markings.
The shape is not accounted for.
Now how did I miss this before?!

The main plants you notice here are the palms, and I especially love the patterns made by the fan-shaped leaves of the Cabbage Palms (Livistona australis).

Taller, and usually in groves, are the stately Bangalow Palms (Archontophoenix cunninghiamia).

Beneath them, the spent palm leaves seem to block out most other plants; an effective mulch.

At a distance in the forest (sorry about the blurry zoomed image) I could see a strange crown-of-thorns-looking growth feature halfway up a tree. It was as if two trees had been butted roots-to-roots in a grafting attempt. I could but try to imagine what had gone on here.
If only trees could talk…or at least in a language we could understand.



















































