MARIBYRNONG & HOBSONS BAY
Home » News » Marian’s tree of life

Marian’s tree of life

For Marian Osborn’s loved ones, it was a poetic way to honour the lifeblood of the family.

For the first time in Melbourne’s west, a person’s scientifically transformed cremated remains have been infused into the root ball of a tree for planting at a cemetery.

Marian’s “Living Legacy” memorial tree at Altona Memorial Park is the culmination of three years work by the Greater Metropolitan Cemeteries Trust and biotech firm Living Legacy Forest, founded in Melbourne five years ago.

Marian’s husband, retired mathematician and physicist Don Osborn, said she had, in a way, been immortalised and was generating new life.

“Our family wanted to recognise Marian’s love for the environment and gardening,” he said.

“The tree will have its own ecosystem and will help sustain local fauna, all under the big open skies of the west she loved so much.”

Marian Osborn Photo: Supplied

Trust chief executive Jacqui Weatherill said that unlike untreated cremated remains, which were toxic to tree roots, Living Legacy Forest’s patented technology transformed cremated remains into micro-nutrients.

“The process provides sustained energy to the tree for seven years,” she said.

Also important to the Osborns is that other family members will have the option of having their treated cremated remains inserted into the area around the tree base.

Marian’s youngest daughter, Elaine Osborn, said the family had stumbled across the option by chance.

“From my perspective, the thing that I think both dad and I enjoyed about the thought of her becoming a tree … is that law of thermodynamics – that matter can’t be created or destroyed, it just transforms,” she said.

“I think about the tree and I can almost picture her cellular level being taken up by the roots and travelling up the tree.

“And being an environmental scientist, understanding how trees work, actually understanding that those nutrients flow through the lifeblood of the tree as a fact.

“That’s what we were driving at with the whole poetic nature of it and especially because we chose the bloodwood [tree] – it’s kind of like her blood is now the blood of the tree.

“It means that in some way she’s continuing to live – and that’s a pretty cool thing.”

A diagram of untreated ash versus treated ash. Image: Supplied

Living Legacy Forest founder Warren Roberts said the trees represented a fundamental shift.

“People can connect to what life created as opposed to what was lost,” he said.

“Legacy Trees can be a bridge from grief to growth.”

Ms Osborn said it had appealed to the family that the trees allowed humans to leave no environmental footprint.

“From my perspective, it’s just a no brainer in the fact that you’ve got this opportunity to virtually carbon-offset your existence on the planet, add another couple of hundred trees and be a living memorial,” she said.

“In terms of conservation of space and giving something back to the planet … and creating something beautiful out of something which is not so nice – losing your mum – it was the best possible option for us. Certainly for us, it reflects the family’s ethos.”

Digital Editions


  • Men’s shed car show comes back

    Men’s shed car show comes back

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532180 For the 18th time, the Hobsons Bay Men’s Shed Car and Bike Show will take place on Sunday…

More News

  • More than four walls

    More than four walls

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 530350 For people who are socially isolated, culturally diverse or part of the LGBTQIA+ community, finding a space where you feel safe and welcomed…

  • Community Calendar

    Community Calendar

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 533209 Join Hobsons Bay Community Fund as a committee member The Hobsons Bay Community Fund is seeking new volunteer committee members to help support…

  • Thousands venerate sacred relics

    Thousands venerate sacred relics

    More than 17,000 people attended Quang Minh Temple in Braybrook last month to pay their respects to sacred relics of the Buddha dating back over 2500 years. The relics travelled…

  • Altona North’s crucial win

    Altona North’s crucial win

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 518147 Altona North took a step to securing its future in the Victorian Turf Cricket Association senior division. The side, in its first season…

  • Jumpstarting young refugees driving journeys

    Jumpstarting young refugees driving journeys

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 228084 A new program will help young people from refugee backgrounds learn to drive. Minister for Roads and Road Safety Melissa Horne announced the…

  • VFL, VFLW fixtures revealed

    VFL, VFLW fixtures revealed

    Fixtures for the Victorian Football League and VFLW seasons have been released. A full schedule has been released for the first 13 rounds of the VFL season and the first…

  • Neighbourhood house hosts garage sale

    Neighbourhood house hosts garage sale

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532968 While most people buy and sell second hand goods online these days, the West Footscray Neighbourhood House (WFNH) is giving people the chance…

  • Models never go out of style

    Models never go out of style

    Iconic Melbourne band and ARIA Hall of Fame inductees, Models bring their post-punk -new wave vibes to Kindred Bandroom in Yarraville on Friday 20 February. When they formed in the…

  • Altona North lewd act investigated

    Altona North lewd act investigated

    Police are appealing for public assistance to help identify a man following a lewd act in Altona North last year. The incident took place near the corner of Millers Road…

  • RAAF sale under fire

    RAAF sale under fire

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532416 The federal government’s announcement that it will sell off defence sites in the western suburbs, including RAAF Base Point Cook, has been met…