Madrone Mushroom Ornaments (Set)
Each one-of-a-kind mushroom decoration is made from a piece of windfallen native Madrone, has a real leather cord for hanging, and is finished with a mix of natural linseed oil and beeswax.
Comes as a set of three; each set will contain a variety of shapes and heights. Individual pieces are between 1-1.75” tall (not including the leather hanger). They’re ever-so-slightly larger than the XS painted mushrooms.
PLEASE NOTE: Not a toy; choking hazard. For decoration only.
About Pacific Madrone:
Pacific Madrone (Arbutus menziesii) is a native tree to the Pacific Northwest, typically found near saltwater coasts. Its appearance is uniquely beautiful, because its outer reddish bark peels off in shreds, revealing a chartreuse underlayer. It is a broadleaf tree whose leaves look similar to those of rhodedendron. It often grows in the companionship of Douglas Fir, another ecologically and culturally important native tree to this area. Madrone fruits (in the form of small berries) are favored by several native species of birds. Indigenous peoples in this region have utilized different parts of the madrone tree for food and medicines for thousands of years.
Source: Northwest Trees, by Stephen F. Arno & Ramona P. Hammerly
Each one-of-a-kind mushroom decoration is made from a piece of windfallen native Madrone, has a real leather cord for hanging, and is finished with a mix of natural linseed oil and beeswax.
Comes as a set of three; each set will contain a variety of shapes and heights. Individual pieces are between 1-1.75” tall (not including the leather hanger). They’re ever-so-slightly larger than the XS painted mushrooms.
PLEASE NOTE: Not a toy; choking hazard. For decoration only.
About Pacific Madrone:
Pacific Madrone (Arbutus menziesii) is a native tree to the Pacific Northwest, typically found near saltwater coasts. Its appearance is uniquely beautiful, because its outer reddish bark peels off in shreds, revealing a chartreuse underlayer. It is a broadleaf tree whose leaves look similar to those of rhodedendron. It often grows in the companionship of Douglas Fir, another ecologically and culturally important native tree to this area. Madrone fruits (in the form of small berries) are favored by several native species of birds. Indigenous peoples in this region have utilized different parts of the madrone tree for food and medicines for thousands of years.
Source: Northwest Trees, by Stephen F. Arno & Ramona P. Hammerly
Each one-of-a-kind mushroom decoration is made from a piece of windfallen native Madrone, has a real leather cord for hanging, and is finished with a mix of natural linseed oil and beeswax.
Comes as a set of three; each set will contain a variety of shapes and heights. Individual pieces are between 1-1.75” tall (not including the leather hanger). They’re ever-so-slightly larger than the XS painted mushrooms.
PLEASE NOTE: Not a toy; choking hazard. For decoration only.
About Pacific Madrone:
Pacific Madrone (Arbutus menziesii) is a native tree to the Pacific Northwest, typically found near saltwater coasts. Its appearance is uniquely beautiful, because its outer reddish bark peels off in shreds, revealing a chartreuse underlayer. It is a broadleaf tree whose leaves look similar to those of rhodedendron. It often grows in the companionship of Douglas Fir, another ecologically and culturally important native tree to this area. Madrone fruits (in the form of small berries) are favored by several native species of birds. Indigenous peoples in this region have utilized different parts of the madrone tree for food and medicines for thousands of years.
Source: Northwest Trees, by Stephen F. Arno & Ramona P. Hammerly