Dr Abe V Rotor
Other Topics: Importance of a garden pond. You
believe in the Doctrine of Signatures
Our homelot
nearly equivalent to a typical subdivision residential lot lies just across the
watershed of La Mesa
dam, the source of water for the population of Metro Manila.
Everyday birds
from the watershed come to our garden.
They perch on the trees singing melodious songs for hours. They are a
gentle alarm clock and at sunset draw out the tension of the day and put it to
rest. For some 25 years now with the children spending their childhood and
adolescence, memories come spontaneously alive at nature’s presence. We look
for nature, but nature comes to you, too. We can make the backyard a sanctuary
of living things. It becomes a corner of
Eden so to
speak, in the inner eyes of the English poet John Milton, in the soul searching
music of Beethoven, and in the quasi-spiritual reverence for life of John Muir
and Also Leopold.
What makes an
ecological garden? Here are some
guidelines.
Let nature do the
arranging of the plants – their kinds, growing habits, seasonal occurrence, and
niches. This principle must prevail over
our plan to make the garden Italian or Japanese in which man dictates the plan
of the garden.
The garden serves
three important functions.
·
Cooling
effect. A 10-year old acacia tree for example, has the capacity to provide
the cooling power of ten 10Hp air conditioning units. Trees make a huge
umbrella that protects us from heat stroke.
·
Windbreak. Trees, especially if planted in group or
rows, and in combination of other plants, can withstand the strength of strong
wind.
·
Sound barrier. Foliage serves as acoustic, absorbing echoes,
and filtering unwanted sound waves, and resonating the good ones like in an
amphitheater.
·
Dust
filter. Plants eliminate particles in the air with their leaves trapping and
moistening them with transpired water, thus sending them back to the soil.
·
Radiation
filter. Plants serve as buffer
against ultraviolet rays as well as cosmic rays. So with other forms of
radiation, visible and invisible, that are harmful to health and environment.
·
Color
filter. Plants act like a giant
prism, but unlike the lens, colors are pooled into a common color - green – the
coolest of all colors, neutral and soothing to the eyes and other senses.
A garden is not a
garden if it does not smell like one. Ilang-ilang exudes sweet scent throughout
the year. It is sweetest in early
morning and evening, and a soft breeze spreads the scent in the neighborhood. The
best scents in the garden come from Eucalyptus, binunga (samat), pandan mabango, sweet basil, roses,
rosal, dama de noche, and of course, sampaguita.
One day I found
leisure watching a spider span a huge web.
It is a giant spider called Haring Gagamba working of a tapestry. I remember the story of the Irish hero,
Robert The Bruce, watch a spider making a web.
The spider failed in several attempts to construct the primary
frame. It gave the downhearted hero the
heart to win back the crown.
In the garden,
there are unceasing battles between and among living things. .
Birds eat on caterpillar, frogs have their fill on flies, dragonflies
hover and devour flying gnats, spiders entrap grasshoppers, preying mantis prey
on unwary insects. I have observed hantik or green tree ants (Oecepalla smaragdina) build nest in the
upper branches of talisay. Their colony is closely knit and their nest is an
architectural wonder. The green leaves
are sewed together by the workers stroking the larvae to secrete a sticky
substance that dries like paper. The larva
is actually carried by an adult like a tube of epoxy as other workers hold the
leaves to be sewed together. These ants attack as an army that even a
caterpillar is subdued in an instant and sooner or later cut into pieces which
the ants carry to their nest to feed the colony.
Yet in the same
spot ants and termites live together. It
is a demonstration on how two different niches work, bounded by biological
rules. The ant colony stays above ground to up the foliage, while the termites
in an anthill called punso. Yes, the
termites – they are an engineering genius.
They build their mound at the foot of the big talisay tree – then, when
dug out move to another place overnight, and when we think they are no longer
there, it is likely that they are virtually sleeping with us inside the
house. And true, we discovered a colony
of termite in an apparador, and another in a roof beam. It is here that man
turn against a destructive organism.
Plants kill other
plants to maintain their boundaries.
They abort germinating seeds even of their kind that become threat to
their existence. Allelopathy is a
phenomenon plants harm one another, in order to enhance success in competition
for sunlight, nutrients, water and space. Plants secrete chemicals in their roots,
stems, and leaves. To illustrate, we have a ten-year old malunggay that is slowly
being choked by coconut and binuga
tree (Macaranga tenarius). All the cultivars of mayana I planted were
lost, due to inter competition, and then they were overrun by carabao
grass. Ube (Dioscorea alata) takes advantage with its viny habit virtually leaping
out into space, its leaves covering much of the trees and wall, then after
rainy season it all disappears leaving but a five-kilo tuber ensconced in the
soft earth and mulch.
But wonder what
those plants are clinging on the trunk of trees. These are epiphytes, a
relationship called commensalisms. The
epiphytes benefit from their tree host.
They gain foothold and elevation to reach sunlight without harming their
host. We have a talisay tree that carries on its trunk a cluster of native
orchid that blooms with a dangling inflorescence appearing like giant
leis.
Lest a garden is
misunderstood as purely aesthetic and ecological. One coconut tree can provide an ample supply
of walis tingting, sweets, coconut
milk (gata), husk for the orchids,
firewood, and buko, but we love this tree of life most whenever birds build
their nest on top and unfold a primitive sense of family love and care.
At night bats
come and gather the ripe fleshy fruits of talisay (Terminalia catappa), and would accidentally drop a fruit or two hitting
the roof of our house, and if we are not aware of the cause, we would attribute
it to a prankster – or a spirit who wants to disturb our sleep.
Do you believe in
spontaneous generation? Saluyot,
amaranth, kamkamote, Portulaca – these and other wild growing
vegetables pop out of the ground following the first heavy rains in May, and
believe it, after two weeks they are ready for the kitchen. Their succulent
leaves and stems are rich in vitamins and minerals. But we do not gather the plants entirely; we
simply trim down the leaves leaving the plant to reach maturity. How these wild
species survive the dry months is a proof of their sturdiness which guided their
successful evolution.
How high can a
tree reach? Well, our ilang-ilang grew and grew and grew, and then one day a
strong wind decapitated it. Then the upper branches dried up one by one until
the tree has but a bunch of low branches.
We know that there is always limit to growth, and the very same factors
that favored it also created its liabilities. I am reminded of the syndrome of
bigness whether it be an animal or tree or business. We call this Dinosaur
Syndrome.
The
Importance of a Garden Pond
Are
you aware that having a pond to complement your garden is beneficial for you
and members of your family? This is so because a pond represents an ecosystem.
As such it has the basic features of a functioning ecological unit.
The pond is a field laboratory
for microbiology. Plankton organisms are revealed under the microscope. In
their diversity, a whole new world unfolds- a world man did not know before
Anton van Leuwenhoek introduced the science of microscopy sometime in the 17th
century.
There are monerans and protists,
the world’s oldest- yet simplest- organisms. It is a wonder why these organisms
did not evolve and develop into complex organisms like the plants and animals
we know- and why they are ensconced in a confined environment such as a pond.
………………………………………………………………………………………………
The microcosm of the ocean is the pond; it
is like “seeing the world in a grain of sand.” And for the eons of time and
generations these organisms have passed through, it is like “holding eternity
in the palm of the hand.” Thus the pond is the representation of our biological
world, manifesting how little we know of God’s immense wisdom contained in a
drop of water that teems with myriads of micro-organisms.
………………………………………………………………………………………………
Anyone who takes time to sit by the pond could lose
his thoughts in the larger realm of nature and the countryside. Cattail and
umbrella plants rise among the floating water lilies, whose pink to purple
flowers break the monotony of the pondscape. But the centerpiece of the pond is
a community of white-flowered lotus or purple flowered Nymphaea..
From the deep green water, one
may be surprised to see a school of colorful carp and tilapia, stirring at the slightest hint of company and food. Their
graceful movement creates gentle waves and soft lapping sounds against the shore
line. To an observant eye, small fish like Poecilia and rainbow fish form small
schools that inhabit the edges of the pond and its tiny islets and coves formed
by aquatic plants and stone. These tiny fish are always mindful about staying
out of the path of their large counterpart. Other than small insects that fall
into the water, they subsist on the latter’s morsels.
At the bottom of the pond lies
the harmless, independent janitor fish known for their role of eating crust of
algae and scum. That is why they are important in keeping aquariums and ponds
clean. In the process, they convert organic matter into detritus, the pond’s
natural fertilizer, and are the source of sediments that accumulate and become
a foothold of aquatic plants. Seldom to these helpful creatures rise to the
surface, but if you want to see these shy, docile fish, peer into the water on
a clear day when the sun is directly above, and you will find them lying
prostrate at the bottom, like sunken ship on a sea floor.
The pond relieves tension. When
you need to relax, observe the turtles basking in the morning sun, stretching
their neck and appendages. Or watch those cooling off on a hot day, their
nostrils and carapace protruding out of the water. Nearby, a toad might
patiently sit on a leaf pad, sheepishly eyeing an unwary insect for its next
meal, its long tongue coiled like spring, ready to strike like lasso.
Bees buzz from
flowers to flower, while dragonflies - red, green and brown - hover prettily
above the water as they search for a suitable place to lay eggs that will hatch
into aquatic nymphs that feed on mosquito wrigglers and Daphnia. Strung on leaves and stalks are spider webs glistening
with dewdrops. These resemble strings of diamonds that will soon turn into
nearly invisible death traps for the hoppers, mosquitoes and flies that stray
into them. Frogs are permanent residents in a small pond, singing at the onset
of rain and exchange love calls throughout the breeding season. They remain
quiet in summer as they aestivate and wait for the rains to come again.
Kataba or canal
fish (Poecillia) thrives without any
care, as long as there is water, living on plankton and insects that fall into
the pond or attracted by a nearby vigil light. Whenever there is stagnant pools
around, I put a pair of these mosquito-eating fish and that solve the
possibility of malaria or dengue to occur in our the place. Our pond serves as
kataba nursery of sort; we give relatives, friends and students who wish to
grow kataba in their own aquarium or pond.
The green water
in the pond is a good hunting ground for microscopic flora and fauna. With a microscope on hand I have discovered a
lot of planktons, many of which are unfamiliar. The green color is made up of
millions of one-celled green algae which constitute the pasture of zooplankton
organisms. They are the autotrophs, the
base of the food pyramid in a pond ecosystem.
Would a backyard
fill in the vacuum created by our wanton destruction of natural resources, the
rape of our forests, the draining of swamps, the conversion of mangrove to
fisheries? Or the gross negligence in
keeping our lakes and rivers full and clean – or at least for having nature to
take care of them? I doubt. But the little Eden each one of us make in
our backyards would collectively recreate little by little that bigger Paradise
we lost, when and to what extent we can only surmise and struggle with will and
resolve. It is our little contribution
in regaining the Lost Paradise. xxx
Trivia:
By examining the physical characteristics of plants we can read how nature
intended them to be used. This is not
true.
This is a belief called Doctrine of Signatures, which was
popular during the Middle Ages. Liverworts (Riccia
and Marchantia) which resemble the
shape of liver are effective for liver diseases. The shapes of eggplant and avocado suggest
fertility and aphrodisiac value. Apple and mango resemble the heart and are
therefore good when it comes to matters of love. Kidney beans are good for the
kidney, but the truth is that it has high uric acid content. The garlic plant
has a hollow stem so that it would be of benefit in afflictions of the
windpipe, hence used in all types of respiratory disorders such as cough,
colds, catarrh, asthma and bronchial problems.
Physical appearance has nothing to do
with the curative powers of plants, or animals for that matter. It is true that
garlic is an effective respiratory cure, but it is its active ingredients that
are responsible for it.
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