Travels in Peru and India by Sir Clements R. Markham
3. Bark and leaves of _C. Lucumæfolia_ of Pavon, from Zamora. This
910 words | Chapter 78
is the _cascarilla de hoja de lucma_ of the natives. Mr. Cross made
no attempt to collect the seeds, as this species is comparatively
worthless.
[384] My collection of dried specimens is deposited in the museum and
herbarium at Kew. It consists of leaves, flowers, fruit, and bark of
_C. Calisaya_; leaves and flowers of _C. micrantha_; leaves and fruit
of _C. Caravayensis_; fruit of _Pimentelia glomerata_; and bark from
the branches of almost every species of chinchona and allied genera in
the Caravayan forests.
Mr. Spruce's collection of all the parts of _C. succirubra_ is in the
herbarium at Kew.
Mr. Pritchett's collection of leaves, fruit, and bark of _C. nitida_,
_C. micrantha_, _C. Peruviana_, and _C. obovata_, is in the possession
of Mr. Howard.
Mr. Cross's dried specimens of leaves, flowers, fruit, and bark of _C.
Condaminea_ (_C. Chahuarguera_ of Pavon), bark, leaves, and flowers of
_C. crispa_ of Tafalla, and bark and leaves of _C. Lucumæfolia_, are
partly in my possession, partly in that of Mr. Howard, and partly in
that of Mr. Veitch.
[385] Six cases of chinchona-plants from this depôt were despatched to
Ceylon by the mail of March 4, 1862.
[386] See Fortune's _Tea Districts_, chap. xxi. p. 358-9.
[387] Mr. Cross says that Wardian cases, as they are at present
constructed, are notoriously unfit for the growth of plants of any
description. He adds that the plants must be healthy root and top
before they are deposited in the cases. They ought to be exposed for at
least a month to the full action of the sun and atmosphere, so that the
juices, stems, and leaves may be fully developed and matured. Plants
taken out of hothouses, or from dense forests, are not in a fit state
to be sent away immediately in Wardian cases. They are then "blanched,"
and are easily affected by adverse influences, such as excess of
moisture or drought.
[388] In October, 1861, the _Schinus molle_ plants were 3 feet high;
and the chirimoyas 15 inches. Plants of both have been sent to the
gardens at Bangalore.
[389] Seemann's _Voyage of the Herald_, i. p. 171.
[390] These 11 classes are:--1. The _Kirüm Nairs_, who are
agriculturists, clerks, and accountants, and do the cooking on all
public occasions, a sure sign of transcendent rank. 2. The _Sudra
Nairs_. 3. The _Charnadus_. 4. The _Villiums_, who are palkee-bearers
to Namburis and Rajahs. 5. The _Wattacotas_, or oil-makers. 6. The
_Atticourchis_, or cultivators. 7. The _Wallacutras_, or barbers. 8.
The _Wallateratas_, or washermen. 9. The _Tunars_, or tailors. 10. The
_Andoras_, or pot-makers. 11. The _Taragons_, or weavers, who are very
low in the scale, for even a potter must purify himself if he chances
to touch a weaver.--Buchanan, ii. p. 408.
[391] Buchanan.
[392] Temulporum and Palghaut.
[393] They range from 12 to 60 reas, or 6 pies to 2 annas 5 pies per
tree.
[394] The value of the exported nuts, kernels, oil, and coir of the
cocoanuts in 1859, was 157,995_l._
[395] Drury's _Useful Plants of India_.
[396] The best soil for ginger-cultivation is red earth free from
gravel. At the commencement of the monsoon beds of 10 or 12 feet by 3
or 4 are formed, in which holes are dug a foot apart, which are filled
with manure. The roots, hitherto carefully buried under sheds, are dug
out, chipped into suitable sizes for planting (1-1/2 to 2 inches long),
and buried in the holes. The bed is then covered with a thick layer
of green leaves, which serve as manure, while they keep the beds from
too much dampness. Rain is requisite, but the beds must be kept from
inundation, and drains are therefore cut between them. The roots or
rhizomes, when old, are scalded, scraped, and dried, and thus form the
white ginger of commerce.--Drury's _Useful Plants of India_.
[397] The tallipot or fan-palm (_Corypha umbraculifera_) has a stem 60
or 70 feet high, crowned with enormous fan-shaped leaves, with 40 or 50
pairs of segments. These fronds, when dried, are very strong, and are
used for hats and umbrellas. The petiole is seven feet long, and the
blade six feet long and thirteen feet broad.
[398] The sumach-tree (_Cæsalpinia coriaria_) was introduced into India
from America, by Dr. Wallich, in 1842. The pods are much used for
tanning purposes.
[399] _Nil_, blue, and _giri_, a mountain; from the blue _Justitias_
which cover many of the hill-slopes.
[400] _Report of Captain J. Ouchterlony, Superintendent of the
Neilgherry Survey in 1848._
[401] Ferdosi.
[402] Dr. Wight says that this plant might be collected in vast
quantities with little trouble or expense, and yields an excellent red
dye.
[403] This nettle is frequent all over the higher ranges of the
Neilgherries. The bark yields a fine strong fibre, which the
natives obtain by first boiling the whole plant, to deprive it
of its virulently-stinging properties, and then peeling the
stalks. The textile material thus obtained is of great delicacy
and strength.--Wight's _Spicelegium Neilgherense_. The fibre of
the Neilgherry nettle is worth 200_l._ a ton in England, and its
cultivation is likely to be a remunerative speculation.
[404] _Tribes inhabiting the Neilgherry Hills, from the rough Notes of
a German Missionary._ (Madras, 1856.)
[405] _Vocabulary of the Dialect spoken by the Todars of the Nilagiri
Mountains_, by the Rev. F. Metz, of the German Evangelical Mission.
(Madras, 1857.)
[406] _Antiquities of the Neilgherry Hills_, by Captain H. Congreve,
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