BangaloreWALKS
History.
Culture. Discovery. |
VIJAY's
MUSINGS
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August Musings
A couple of years ago, when in Australia,
I visited the Royal Botanical Gardens
at Melbourne. Soon after I entered the gardens, I
noticed a beautiful black Swan swimming in the lake
under the overhanging branches of a tree covered with
beautiful mauvish pink flowers.
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Our
guide wished to know if any of us knew the name
of the tree. It wasn’t difficult for me
to identify the tree: it was the Pride
of India or Lagerstroemia
speciosa. Successful identification over,
I was rewarded with Australian Shiraz wine in
a beautiful café in the gardens –
he went on to explain to me that the grapes
for the wine also came from Asia.
I would
request that our walkers make no such demands
on me on successful identification of trees
at Lalbagh till such time they can help me get
the authorities to run a nice little restaurant
which will offer some Indian and local wines
such as Grover Shiraz from Doddaballapur. |
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PRIDE
OF INDIA and CREPE MYRTLE
Pride
of India/Lagerstroemia speciosa
The Pride of India
is variously referred to as Queen’s
Flower , Lagerstroemia speciosa in Latin, Jarul
in Hindi and Holematti
in Kannada. The tree is named after Magnus Lagerstroem,
a Swedish merchant who funneled specimens from the
East to Linnaeus in Europe. This tree is found across
the Indian subcontinent in the Western Ghats, Bengal,
Bangladesh, Assam, Myanmar and Sri Lanka.
The Jarul is a
slow growing tree reaching a height of around 50 feet.
Prior to dropping off in the dry season, the leaves
turn yellowish red. The flowers bloom along with the
appearance of the new leaf. The bright pink, pinkish
mauve and purplish flowers appear in prominent clusters
in large terminal panicles . The flowers have 6 or
7 petals crinkled and wavy and make a very attractive
display when massed together. The flower panicles
thrust out from the tree radially beyond the foliage
towards the sky.
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The fruits
are found in great profusion and persist for a long
time. Thus, one sees the blackened fruits of the preceding
season together with green fruits of the current season.
The fruits are globular and contain pale brown winged
seeds. The tree is of considerable use medicinally.
The decoction from the boiled leaves is very effective
medicine for diabetes.
In the Andamans the fruit is used to cure mouth ulcers.
The roots are prescribed as an astringent, the seeds
are narcotic, the bark and leaves roots and flowers
used variously in Indian medicine.
The tree provides
a resin. The wood which
is a walnut colour or offwhite, is a hardy and valuable
wood particularly for uses underwater. Traditionally
the wood has been used for such purposes as building
boats, furniture, canoes, wagons, buildings and railway
sleepers. In Bangladesh and Myanmar the most valuable
wood after Teak is the Jarul
timber.
The Jarul is a
sturdy good looking tree with beautiful flowers reaching
out of the tree. It provides valuable wood and all
other parts of the tree have medicinal uses. It is
rarely that one comes across a tree which is as complete
in all respects as the Jarul is. For these reasons
it has been declared the State
Tree of Maharashtra.
Lalbagh has a
number of these trees. In August we are entering the
end of the flower bloom. When in bloom, of course,
the tree is breathtaking.
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LAGERSTROEMIA
INDICA – CREPE MYRTLE/CRAPE MYRTLE
Variously called
Farash/Purush
(Hindi), Crepe plant, China
privet and Indian Lilac.
This is another
commonly grown species of the same genus known as
the Chinai mendhi revealing
that the plant is a native of China. It is small enough
to be considered a shrub and generally grows to a
height of about 10 ft with the flowers amassed in
the extremities of the branches. There is considerable
range of the colours of the flowers from white to
dark pink, dark crimson, bluish mauve to purplish
mauve.
Why most American descriptions
use the spelling “crape” is inexplicable.
However, in America the plant has been very successfully
planted, so much so that the crepe myrtle has been
naturalized through out the United States as far north
as Massachusetts. The Americans have also produced
a series of hybrids resulting in great varieties of
derivatives of the crepe myrtle. They are planted
along highways, everywhere in urban areas and with
great aesthetic effect with often a single splendid
specimen in the middle of a lawn.
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