Bark is the part of a tree most gardeners ignore until it's too late to plant for it. Smooth, peeling, mottled, swollen or coloured — bark gives you texture year round, and it really matters in winter when deciduous trees drop their leaves.
This is a shortlist of five trees grown specifically for their bark. Some peel, some swell, some shine in winter cold. All of them earn their spot in the garden.
The peelers
Crepe Myrtle Natchez and Eucalyptus Silver Princess both shed bark in patches to reveal smooth coloured layers below. Crepe Myrtle goes cinnamon. Silver Princess shows powdery pink and silver. Both look spectacular under low winter sun.

The patchwork
Ulmus parvifolia, the Chinese Elm, has bark that flakes in irregular patches creating a camouflage pattern in cream, grey and rust. The pattern develops with age, so older trees have more character than younger ones.

The swollen trunk
Brachychiton rupestris, the Queensland Bottle Tree, is in a category of its own. The trunk swells into a fat bottle shape that gets more dramatic with age. It's living sculpture.

The coloured stem
Acer palmatum 'Sango Kaku', the Coral Bark Maple, has bright coral-red branches that intensify through winter. When the leaves drop in autumn, the coral stems take over and glow against pale walls or frost.
Pairing the layers
Bark trees work best as features against an evergreen backdrop. Ficus Hillii, Bay or Murraya behind them creates the dark green wall that pushes the bark texture forward visually.
FAQs
When does bark texture show best?
Winter, when deciduous trees drop their leaves and low sun rakes across the trunk.
Do I need to clean off old bark?
No. Let it shed naturally. Sweeping or scraping damages the layer underneath.
Can I plant these in 30°C and above climates?
All five handle Australian summers once established. Mulch heavily and deep water for the first two summers.
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