In a really nice little piece of very diverse snow gum woodland behind the Numeralla hall; not common there. The foliage is markedly dimorphic, with much broader leaflets at the base of the plant.
Not a great photo of the bird, but I got a good look at its yellow crest when it flew, so definitely a sulphur-crested and not a corella. There are numerous fruiting pines planted around Currango homestead and all of them had many chewed cones underneath (photo 3). I'm used to seeing this sort of activity in pines from Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoos, but judging by the white feathers on the ground this was all done by Sulphur-cresteds.
Growing in a roadside drain on a ridge top; more usually found on lower, shady sites on our place.