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View below for more product details and a description of the material this pen has been handcrafted from.
Item | Music Style Pen |
Finish | Chrome Finish |
Material | Budgaroo |
Shipping Australia: | Free within Australia |
Shipping International: | $12.00 |
Warranty: | 90 Days |
Payment Options: | |
Credit Card | Visa/MasterCard |
Paypal | PayPal for PayPal members |
Direct Bank Transfer | Australian Hordes Only |
Your recipient will twist and shout with joy over this perfect musical gift.
The pen cap features a realistically inspired snare drum Ð a versatile drum used in the military,
marching bands and even rock bands. The pen clip replicates the head, neck and strings of a guitar.
The center band features piano keys while the tip of the pen features music notes and symbols.
Includes a smooth writing Parker style refill.
Allocasuarina is a genus of trees in the flowering plant family Casuarinaceae. They are endemic to Australia, occurring primarily in the south. Like the closely related genus Casuarina, they are commonly called sheoaks or she-oaks, they are notable for their long, segmented branchlets that function as leaves. Formally termed cladodes, these branchlets somewhat resemble pine needles, although sheoaks are actually flowering plants. The leaves are reduced to minute scales encircling each joint. Fallen cladodes form a dense, soft mat beneath sheoaks, preventing the development of undergrowth (a phenomenon known as allelopathy) and making sheoak woods remarkably quiet.
Another characteristic feature are the spiny "cones", about the size of an acorn but with a texture more resembling a conifer cone. However, sheoak "cones" are actually a woody fruit. Male specimens bear no fruit and are sometimes colloquially referred to as a "heoak".
As with legumes, sheoak roots possess nodules containing symbiotic nitrogen fixing bacteria; together with their highly drought-adapted foliage, this enables sheoaks to thrive in very poor soil and semi-arid areas. However, sheoaks are much less bushfire-tolerant than eucalypts.
Fossils of closely related species have been found dating back to the time of Gondwana.