WHAT IS CORK MADE OF?


CLICK HERE FOR THE NEW 'GARDEN OF EADEN' WEBSITE AND SEED SHOP

­Just ­about every tree has an outer layer of cork bark, but the cork oak (Quercus suber) is the primary source of most cork products in the world, including wine bottle stoppers. These trees primarily grow in countries that run along the coast of the Mediterranean Sea, where there's plenty of sunshine, low rainfall and high humidity. The countries that produce the most cork include Portugal, Algeria, Spain, Morocco, France, Italy and Tunisia.

So, why does the cork oak have a thicker layer of cork bark than other trees? The tree evolved to protect itself from the harsh conditions of the forests near the Mediterranean. These forests experience frequent droughts, brush fires and temperature fluctuations. Cork is actually made of water-resistant cells that separate the outer bark from the delicate interior bark. It has a unique set of properties not found in any other naturally existing material. It is lightweight, rot resistant, fire resistant, termite resistant, impermeable to gas and liquid, soft and buoyant. It's these properties that make it ideal for stopping wine bottles and tile flooring. Let's take a look at how cork gets stripped from the tree and processed into consumer products.

1. Stripping the bark - a cork oak must be at least 25 years old before its bark can be harvested. Its cork can then be stripped every 8 to 14 years after that for as long as the tree lives. The cork is stripped off during June, July and August using a long-handled hatchet to cut sections out of the bark. These sections are then pried away from the tree. Workers must be careful not to damage the inner layer of the bark, otherwise the bark won't grow back.

2. Washing the cork - The cork slabs that are cut away from the tree are boiled and the rough outer layer of the bark is stripped away. Boiling the cork also softens it, making it easier to work with.

3. Punching Bottle Stoppers - from the slabs of cork, holes are punched out to make bottle stoppers. This leaves the slabs full of holes. These bottle stoppers are then sorted and shipped to various destinations. The stoppers can at this time be printed or branded with names or logos.
4. Uses for Scrap Cork - once the bottle stoppers have been punched out of the cork slabs, there is some leftover cork scrap. This scrap is ground up, molded into large blocks and baked in ovens to make other cork products, such as cork tile flooring and cork message boards.

Cork has been used as bottle stoppers for more than 400 years. It is possibly the best suited material to use as a bottle stopper because it contains a natural waxy substance, called suberin. This substance makes cork impermeable to liquids and gas, and prevents the cork from rotting.

For related articles click onto:
How Big is the Blue Whale?
How and What do Worms Eat?
Hardy Cacti and Succulents for Growing Outside
How do you Harden off Seedlings?
How to Break Dormancy in Seeds
How to Control Weeds in the Lawn
How do you find Truffles?
How to Get Rid of Moss in Lawns?
How to Grow a Lawn from Seed
How to Harden Off Seedlings
How to Improve Drainage in Lawns
How to Make Compost
How to Make John Innes Compost
How to Make Liquid Fertilizer from Comfrey
How Can You Improve Clay Soils?
How to Build a Compost Heap Pile
How to Build a Dry Stone Wall
What are Plant Macronutrients and Micronutrients?
What are Plant Nutrients?
What are Prunes?
What Causes Blue Hydrangeas to Turn Pink?
What Causes Moss in Lawns
What is Chlorosis?
What is E.Coli?
What is John Innes Base?
What is John Innes Compost?
What is a Leaf Mould Compost?
What is a Wormery?
What is an Epiphyte?
What is Fibre?
What is an F1 Hybrid?
What is Homeostasis?
What is Myrrh?
What is an Orchid?
What is Over-watering and How to Recognise it?
What is Pricking out?
What is Rhubarb Poisoning?
What is Frankincense and Myrrh?
What is Seed Dormancy?
What is the Difference between a Fruit and a Vegetable?
What is the Difference between a Frog and a Toad?
What is the Differerence between a Fruit and a Vegetable?
What is the Biggest Flower in the World?
Why do Onions make you Cry?
Why is the Sea Salty?
Why is the Sea Blue?

Based on an article by http://home.howstuffworks.com/question550.htm

Cork cutting photo care of http://fincacarolina.blogspot.com/

1 comment:

Giga said...

Widziałam na Korsycete te dęby. Bez kory były smutne, takie gołe. Pozdrawiam