Thursday, March 15, 2007

March 15, 2007

Miami has a large population of huge banyan trees. Many of them were uprooted during the hurricanes of recent years, but you cannot travel in Miami and avoid seeing them. They are large trees and can provide a source of shellac and dye. Shellac is produced by lac insects that grow on banyan trees as parasites and it is an important ingredient in French polish.

The close up shows the trunk of a banyan tree being strangled by its aerial roots. If you look closely, the new leaves grow from the smaller roots to produce tiny new plants that can be transplanted. The small aerial root seen on the right will become huge if left untouched. This banyan is no other than the sacred Ficus Religiosa that I talked about on March 09. As I began searching for them in Miami, I found a dozen trees on this well traveled North South road. In this photo, you can see the characteristic shape of the sacred leaves of this tree.

The large tree trunk dwarfs the road side bus stop shelter, which is only a few feet away. As always, ads appear on every visible surface areas and this ad sells the dark Dominican Republic rum "Ron Barcelo Imperial."

Sacred banyan

1 comment:

Unknown said...

BEAUTIFUL BO TREE...WOULD LIKE TO SEE IN PERSON...PLEASE E-MAIL EXACT LOCATION TO CROZZWORDPRODUCTIONS@GMAIL.COM