Showing posts with label bananas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bananas. Show all posts

Monday, 20 August 2012

Garden flowers & fruit



I've very briefly mentioned in passing our prolific bananas in a previous post, but the annual flowering of the beautiful Cup of Gold Vine, one of my favourite plants (which has just happened within the past few days) encouraged me to share a few photos of our garden. Underneath each photo I've put: Latin name / English name / French or Reunion Creole name.


The Cup of Gold vine is also known as Golden Chalice Vine or Hawaiian Lily, but in Reunion it's called "Fleur coco" because of the coconut smell of the flowers.

Solandra maxima / Cup of Gold Vine / Fleur coco

The plant below doesn't look much but Night-blooming jasmine smells divine in the evening:
Cestrum Nocturnum / Night-blooming jasmine / Jasmin de nuit

The frangipani is another one of my sweet-smelling favourites, although you don't have to wait for nightfall to appreciate it. Different varieties exist but as you can see ours has large white flowers with a small yellow centre. When the flowers fall I sometimes float them in a bowl of a water.

Plumeria / Frangipani / Frangipanier

The Traveller's palm is originally from Madagascar and is not a true palm, but a member of the bird-of-paradise family. The name supposedly comes from the fact that the sheaths of the stems hold rainwater, which theoretically could be used as an emergency water supply for thirsty travellers.

Strelitziaceae / Traveller's palm / Arbre du voyageur ou Ravenala

It's easy to see where the Chinese hat plant gets its name from:

Holmskioldia sanguinea / Chinese hat plant / Chapeau chinois

The Allamanda is also known as Yellow Bell, Golden Trumpet or Buttercup Flower. We have two different varieties in our garden - one with large flowers (see bottom left and right), and one with small flowers (see middle and top left of photo):

Allamanda / Buttercup Flower / Coupe d'Or or Trompette d'Or

The Jungle Geranium is also known as Flame of the Woods (I prefer the latter name). Its latin name, Ixora, derives from that of an Indian deity, from where it originates.

Ixora coccinea / Flame of the Woods / Ixora

Like the traveller's palm, the golden cane palm, areca palm, or butterfly palm is another plant originating from Madagascar.

Dypsis lutescens / Butterfly Palm / Multipliant

We've planted our own mango tree (see first picture below) but it's still young and to be honest the one in our neighbour's garden hanging over the back wall gives us more fruit! In Reunion the fruit are ripe in summer between November and April, depending on the variety. The main cultivars found in Reunion are Carotte, José, Lucie, Auguste, Maison Rouge and Earlygold.

Mangifera indica / Mango / Mangue

neighbour's mango tree

We grew our avocado tree from a pit and it's still quite young. Last year there were lots of flowers but no fruit. This year at the time of writing there are lots of flowers once again - maybe this time we'll have some avocados? (By the way the French word for avocado - avocat - is the French word for a lawyer. I've seen some very funny menu and recipe automatic machine translations on the internet along the lines of "add 100g of chopped lawyer"!).

Persea americana / Avocado / Avocat

Our red hibiscus doesn't flower very often, but when it does I think the flowers are magnificent.

Hibiscus / Hibiscus / Hibiscus

The nastus bamboo is known locally as calumet, and my husband particularly appreciates it as he grew up in a house called "Les Calumets" where there were many in the garden.

Nastus borbonicus / Nastus bamboo / Calumet

Another one of my fragrant favourites, the strong-smelling ylang-ylang is used in perfumery and is grown widely in the Comoros Islands and Mayotte also known as the Perfumed Islands for this reason. The flower is pale yellow and can be seen in the middle of this picture:

Cananga odorata / Ylang-ylang / Ylang-ylang 

This Copperleaf was planted by one of our tenants when we rented our house out for three years while we were in S. Korea.



Acalypha / Copperleaf / Foulard

Bougainvillea are an attractive flowering plant, but beware their thorns!

Bougainvillea / Bougainvillea / Bougainvillier or Bougainvillée

This papaya has been chopped down since I took the photo - neither my husband or I are big fans of papaya and the tree was starting to get in the way. We didn't even plant it - it probably grew from seeds dropped by a bird. Although it looks like a tree it's actually just a big plant - it grows several metres high very quickly and the trunk is hollow.

Carica papaya / Papaya or Pawpaw / Papaye

I think these Amaryllis were planted by our tenants when we lived in South Korea. We just leave them alone and they flower every year.

Amaryllis

Finally I thought I'd take you through the various stages of growth of bananas. Here are baby banana plants:


Like papaya, bananas are plants and not trees. They grow to be several metres tall: 


Each plant produces one banana heart:

reddish-purple banana heart

Over a period of several months the bananas develop from this heart:


In the picture below the fruit have all developed, but still have several weeks or even a couple of months before they're ripe. In Reunion the heart, known locally as a baba figue, is sometimes cut and used to make a carri (savoury Creole dish).


We normally cut a stalk when one of the bananas has just turned yellow, or is on the point of doing so. If we don't, the birds will get to them first! (Note that the fruit grow upwards, and not downwards as some supermarkets would have you believe).

freshly-cut stalk

Once the stalk of fruit has been cut the plant dies and we cut it down, however offshoots often develop from the base of the plant and the whole process starts all over again!

ripening stalk 

Believe it or not all the banana photos above were taken on the same day; we always seem to have several stalks on the go in various stages of ripeness. Sometimes we have so many bananas I feel I should be selling them by the side of the road, like this lady I saw in Sri Lanka.

I hope you enjoyed this visit to my garden!


Saturday, 26 November 2011

Garden production

First home-grown production from our prolific bananas since we arrived back on Reunion from South Korea.

mmm!

Monday, 13 April 2009

Sri Lanka

Banana seller

Two weeks after our trip to the Philippines I was off travelling again, this time to meet a friend in Sri Lanka. There are no direct flights from Seoul, so I had to travel there via Singapore.

As I was travelling with a friend who writes guide-books, we were lucky enough to be invited to stay in 9 different hotels over a two-week period, gradually working our way down the south-west coast.  One of the first hotels we stayed in was the Mount Lavinia, just south of the capital Colombo.  This is the view we had from our room :



The hotel has an interesting story, as it was originally a country mansion built by the island's second Governor, Sir Thomas Maitland, in 1806.  When he fell in love with a beautiful mestizo dancer, Lovinia Aponsuwa, he lodged her not far away and an underground tunnel - which apparently still exists - connected her humble dwellings with the governor's mansion so that they could pursue their clandestine romance.

There is a railway station just next to the hotel, and Colombo is not far away by train.


Here are some street scenes from Colombo:


Jami-Ul Alfar mosque, Colombo

Cargills department store, Colombo

Further down the coast at Kalutara we stayed at the Kani Lanka resort :

hauling in the fishing net

Gangatilaka Vihara dagoba, Kalutara

mosque, Kalutara

temple, Kalutara

lighthouse, Berawala

Here is one of the ubiquitous tuk-tuks, normally seen on the roads, but exceptionally in this case on the beach !

tuk-tuk

Next was the Barberyn Reef Ayurveda Resort at Beruwala, where we had some ayurvedic treatments, and toured the ayurvedic treatment center.


This area suffered many losses during the 2004 tsunami.  This memorial is dedicated to the 1270 train passengers who lost their lives that day.


Tsunami victims memorial

Tsunami victims memorial

Our following stop down the coast was the UNESCO-inscribed town of Galle, staying in the The Fortress hotel - much more luxurious than its name sounds !

Galle

playing cricket

There were many fishing stilts in the sea just in front of the hotel.  The fishermen perch, holding onto the stilt with one hand and fishing with a rod in the other hand.

fishing stilts

fishing stilts

We then moved onto another Barberyn Ayurvedic hotel, the Beach Resort, from where we visited Dondra, which has two important temples and a lighthouse at Sri Lanka's most southerly point.

temple, Dondra
temple, Dondra


temple, Dondra

temple, Dondra

Dondra Head lighthouse

Sri Lanka's most southerly point, near Dondra

We also visited Weherahena temple which houses an enormous Buddha statue as well as scenes from Buddha's life.

monk, Weherahena temple

Weherahena temple

Weherahena temple

Weherahena temple

Afterwards we headed inland to Ella in the hill country for one night :


rice paddies

Ceylon tea plantations

tea pickers
before taking the train to Kandy.


tea plantations & pickers seen from the train



on the train, looking back

Kandy's (and probably Sri Lanka's) most important site is the Temple of the (Sacred) Tooth (Relic), which, as the name implies, is supposed to house one of Buddha's holy teeth. In Kandy we stayed at the Mahaweli Reach hotel.

Temple of the Tooth
One of the striking architectural features of Sri Lankan temples are the moonstones, which are semi-circular carved stone slabs.

Moonstone

 Inside the temple of the tooth :





We then took another train down from Kandy to Colombo, and from Colombo to Wadduwa, where we stayed at the lovely Blue Water Resort.

Kandy to Colombo train.

from the train

Wadduwa

kingfisher/kingfisher-type bird

Our last stop was at the Taj Sumudra hotel. The photo below was taken from our room, looking over the Galle Face Green to the famous Galle Face hotel.



Recommended reading :

Lonely Planet Sri Lanka (Country Travel Guide)