'Wellingtonias don't grow burrs', said the tree surgeon, as he handed me a lump of burr and I braced myself to take the weight of it. When he handed it over, it felt so light that I overcompensated for its weight and my hand bobbed upwards. It was covered in typical wellingtonia bark, soft and spongy with flakes of it peeling away here and there. I took it home and pressure washed it, stripping the bulk of the bark away, and this is what I had left.
![](http://i12.photobucket.com/albums/a238/lessymonds/DSCF4134_zpsaepetiol.jpg)
....it looks very typical of burr growth.....
![](http://i12.photobucket.com/albums/a238/lessymonds/DSCF4137_zpszykcns2p.jpg)
.... but here's the strange thing, turn it over, and it's also a burr on the other side
![](http://i12.photobucket.com/albums/a238/lessymonds/DSCF4135_zpsj0i41lrp.jpg)
....in fact, all that seems to have connected it to the host tree, were these two sawn-off twigs, each a little over an inch across.
![](http://i12.photobucket.com/albums/a238/lessymonds/DSCF4136_zpsnpj40il4.jpg)
It appears that the base of the entire trunk is surrounded by these growths. I had considered turning a half-round hollow into one face, but it's so light and soft that I don't think that it would survive the process....so I stuck it in the shop with some candle holders displayed on it.
Anyone ever seen anything like it before?
Les