Have you seen the Winter Flower Show? The gardening staff at MMC have done another outstanding job of putting together a flower show in the MMC Sunken Garden room. As usual, the colors are vibrant and the smells are floral bouquets of sweetness. If you haven’t attended one of the flower shows here, you are really missing some spectacular experiences!
Tahitian Gooseberry |
Cotton Plant |
While conversing with another volunteer, I learned something new about the golden pathos plant used for ground cover around the conservatory. When growing level across the ground, the leaves of this plant are generally small. But when this plant is able to grow upwards as a vine, the leaves on the plant get bigger and bigger.
The Plant of the Day is the Jackfruit tree (Artocarpus heterophyllus). The jackfruit tree can be seen just inside the entrance of the North Garden. Able to grow up to 20 meters high, this tree is typically found in lowland tropical or near-tropical forests. It is thought to originate in India, but can now be found in Malyasia, China, the Phillipines, East Indies, India and Africa.
Jackfruit |
One visitor to the conservatory mentioned that back in his hometown in Africa, this tree drops its fruits at midnight. The folks in his village would go out to collect the fruit at 2-3am. They did this because the ripe stage for the jackfruit is very short. They would then eat parts of the fruit and roast the seeds which he said are very delicious!
Other sources indicate that the fruit can be cut up into pieces, fried and eaten like potato chips. Other food options include making the fruit into jam, fermenting the fruit into an alcoholic drink or even feeding it to livestock.
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