Actually it was on Friday, our May Day holiday, that I saw the Ceibas (formerly Chorisia) and had driven past them before I realised what I'd been past! There is a row of these spiny-barked Silk Floss Ceiba speciosa trees next to the gate of the farm Le Chasseur on a back road near Robertson.
The flowers are difficult to miss! It seems the row is a collection, because there is a pale one too.
The single stamens on all of these flowers differ from those on the tree here in the Village outside Grabouw Auto Electrical, which have five individual stamens.
The story behind these trees in South Africa began with a pillow brought from South America stuffed with the floss from the seed pods of this plant. A lump was found which turned out to be a seed. It was planted and it flourished!
The Bolivian Legend of the Toborochi Tree (Chorisia speciosa) goes like this: When the world was still very new, the Aña, or spirits of the darkness, liked to abuse and murder humans. Then they found out that Araverá, the beautiful daughter of cacique Ururuti, who had married the Hummingbird god Colibri, was pregnant and would give birth to a son who would punish them, so they decided to kill her. With the help of a flying seat her husband had given to her, Araverá fled from the village, but the evil spirits followed her and harassed her wherever they found her hiding. Tired, she decided to hide in the trunk of a Toborochi tree where she gave birth to her son in peace.The boy grew up and fulfilled the prophecy, avenging his mother, who had to stay inside the tree until she died. Forever buried in the amphora-shaped trunk of a Toborochi, Araverá likes to come outside in the shape of a beautiful flower that attracts hummingbirds, that way, she keeps contact with her husband.
There seems to be no agreement over the single and multiple stamens and the general comment is that they have hybridised over the years and may well have before being imported.
At least that gives some colour to the 'walk' which was decidedly lacking in it, except for green which gets more every week. We had a little rain this last week which must have helped.
We checked the Gladiolus carneus we tracked down two weeks ago and were disappointed to see some animal had dug up some of the bulbs. We put them back and covered them and we'll hope for the best.
The yellow Oxalis give a bit of colour here and there.....
..... as do the pink ones, although it was overcast and they were closing.
Anina told us to look out for the branched and frilly sterile culms which will come up first out of the burned remains of the Restios. These are beginning to appear, but with them (and them only), we spotted insects.
I have put a request for identification on iSpot.
This Wachendorfia is looking spectacular, the one behind it seems to have been eaten off. There are many rabbit tracks.
Not sure what this is, but it's growing nicely out of a burned stump!
This one I do recognise as a Brachylaena neriifolia.
We reported on this stand of Agapanthus, presumably the rare A. walshii in an area where we had not found them before. My count went past 50 individual plants!
When we did see colour, it stood out! This Tritoniopsis lata would have been difficult to miss!
The Pelargoniums are coming back strongly, we know where they were best before.
Outside the railway cottage ruins is a stump with impressive Cinnabar Brackets Pycnoporus sanguineus.
Also there, it's difficult to go past the Prickly Pear Opuntia and not look at the flowers!
Back on the farm this Daisy begged to be photographed:
From the side:
.... and the leaves. Which one is it?
Also at home was this Bolete (?):
From underneath, still to be identified.
:-) A
Nioce photos, little bits of green appearing together with some nice flowers, like the adding of earlier photos of the Ceibas, well done.
ReplyDelete