A little while back there was a big windstorm
in our area which brought down a few trees in the area. In nearbye Cheong Park,
one dead Gum came out roots and all near the Hall. A week or so later I noticed
that it had been cut up into 2 foot lengths; and a few days later I noticed
that all but the stump had been taken. I also noticed on the stump one root
that had it have been nicked off would have made a great Mallee root for someone’s
fire.
The moment I thought that, I thought, “My
Goodness. How long is it since I have heard that word?” Once upon a time, like
back in my childhood, words like Mallee root and Mallee gate were very common,
but as indicated above, rarely used these days.
Way
back after World War 1 areas of rural Australia were set apart and allocated to
ex-soldiers to farm, including parts of Gippsland and also the Mallee region. Now
in the Mallee there is a specific Eucalyptus tree called surprisingly, the
Mallee Gum. It only grows around 30 feet but can regrow and have a good root
system. As part of the Solder settlement
scheme the recipients had to clear and farm the land. For the Mallee area this
meant clearing the Mallee Gums. A side benefit of this clearing process was
that the fire wood from the trees was also a good money earner back in the days
of wood Fires. The Mallee roots were not so easy to sell but being cheaper
turned out to be much desired for open fires for their long burning abilities,
as well as at a cheaper cost. Thus while originally reserved for the roots of
Mallee Gums, it soon became the generic term of all tree roots; whether from
the Mallee, or from Watson’s Creek, of from anywhere for that matter.
Thus although nowhere near the Mallee we had
more than our share of Mallee roots , especially from a hill that Dad cleared
that was originally called Sapling Hill because of the large number of small
Gum tree saplings on it at the beginning of the process. Although Dad sold a
fair bit of Firewood himself, I don’t think he ever sold any of the roots.
Instead we used them ourselves in the lounge room open fire. All that is almost
long forgotten now with open fires in most places, a thing of the past now.
Coincidently upon reading
the above, our son in Adelaide replied, “Interestingly
enough we bought some mallee root for the fire last year from the garden place
down the road.”
So obviously Mallee Roots are not completely in
the past after all? What about you? When was the last time you used mallee
roots to burn?
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