Mar 162013
 

The past few weeks have been very busy for me and Pim with all the doctor’s visits required of her 7th month of carrying, updating public records, acquiring necessary documents and filing her immigrant visa application that we never had much time to visit the farm except to make short stops to check the work done. With a baby coming along I miss the times when I spent most of my free time making the rounds at the farm and sometimes, when I’m feeling more adventurous, even going out far into the open grassland and woodlands beyond our fence; not even deterred by the sun’s heat or occasional rains.

Yesterday gave me free time so Val, my farm overseer, and I walked to check the partially shaded trees we’ve planted the past years along the shallow creek that borders the farm. We don’t usually collect fruits during the first quarter of the year because most trees we observe are not in fruit this season. It slipped my mind though that one particular cauliflorous and water-loving tree displays its magenta to deep-purple berries from January to March. And so there they were, ready for the picking! We have about a dozen of this wild trees scattered along the same natural waterway.

Val helped himself in sampling this season’s harvest; the shiny berries are sweet but they leave a little astringency on the tongue; truly a forest fruit! (289)

Aug 292012
 

Specimen : Wild trees

Habitats : Thickets along waterways

Local names : Balinawnaw, Linawnaw

Botanical name : Lepisanthes fruticosa

Family : Sapindaceae

Height : 4-6 meters

Fruiting season : January to March

Traits : Evergreen; Large shrub to small tree; Low to medium altitude tree; Shade tolerant; Water-logging tolerant; Willowy

Recommendations : Backyards; Farms; Fruit collector’s; Home gardens; Nurse tree; Ornamental tree or shrub; Urban greening; Wildcrafting

Used for : Edible fruits; Seeds are also eaten fried or roasted; Fuelwood

Native range : Southeast Asia (including the Philippines)

National conservation status : Not threatened in the Philippines

Threats : Cutting of wild trees for fuelwood and charcoal production

Further readings :

Revised Lexicon of Philippine Trees (J. Rojo)

Species without current development potential for economic uses (FAO Corporate Document Repository)http://www.fao.org/docrep/004/ab777e/ab777e06.htm

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Aug 162012
 

Specimen : Wild trees

Habitats : Forests along waterways

Local name : Sarakag

Botanical name : Lepisanthes tetraphylla

Family : Sapindaceae

Specimen height : 6-10 meters

Traits : Evergreen; Low to medium altitude tree; Shade-loving; Small tree; Willowy

Recommendations : Erosion control; Riparian management

Native range : Sri Lanka, India, Bangladesh, China, Southeast Asia (including the Philippines), New Guinea

National conservation status : Not threatened in the Philippines

Threats : Cutting of wild trees for fuel and charcoal production; Clearing of woodlands for conversion to agricultural, commercial or residential plots

Further readings :

Asianplant.net - Lepisanthes tetraphylla

http://www.asianplant.net/Sapindaceae/Lepisanthes_tetraphylla.htm

Revised Lexicon of Philippine Trees (J. Rojo)

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