Ironbark Decking- Random Length

Ironbark presents as a stunning array of colours, ranging from pale grey or light chocolate to darker reds and browns.

The texture is moderately coarse and even, with interlocking grain. Ironbark is a premium native hardwood that has always been a highly regarded timber. Indigenous Australians use it to make spear throwers and boil its bark for treating wounds. It is a particularly hard, strong and durable timber, with a broad range of applications, due to its resistance to lyctid borers and termites.

It is a particularly hard, strong and durable timber, with a broad range of applications, due to its resistance to lyctid borers and termites. Ironbarks are a very characteristic group of trees, aptly named after their thick, compact and hard bark. The commercially available Ironbark species are divided into Grey and Red Ironbarks. Trees grow in north central Victoria, on the inland slopes of New South Wales and occasionally in the coastal districts of Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland.

The Grey Ironbark is a medium sized tree of 30 to 50m with a stem diameter of 1.5m. The bark is hard, coarse, with deep furrows and ridges, ranging from dark brown to black in colour and grows even on the small branches.

Red Ironbark, E. Drepanophylla, is found from northern New South Wales to Bundaberg, Queensland. It is also found in scattered patches as far north as the Atherton Tableland. Grey Ironbark, E. Paniculata, is found in New South Wales only from Bega to Coffs Harbour.

A very heavy timber, at 1120 kilograms per cubic metre, grey ironbark is dense and can be difficult to work. Dressed surfaces take on a steely sheen.

A beautiful dense and durable timber, perfect for flooring, decking and cladding with a Janka rating of 14.0