It is a cool morning in end-April in this part of our forest and as we walk on the track with prodigious quantities of dried elephant dung, one eye out for the pachyderm if he is somewhere, the trees and bushes draw attention. Pongamia is everywhere here, yet, as we go in further and rocky outcrops abound, jalaari - Shorea rox - takes over. This is my favourite tree and the flowering season was over about a month and a half ago, but thousands of light coloured winged seeds - those helicopter ones which twirl and twist as they fall - droop on the branches.
Today, I hope to see a variety of flowers though: Careya in all its beauty or perhaps Firmiana colorata (toes crossed and walking on stilts). But then we come to a dense crop of these trees with tiny, beautiful blue florets in clusters of deep blue. Aren’t they utterly beautiful!
This, ladies and gentlemen, is the iron wood tree, a small hardwood, called Memecylon something-something in Latin & Greek (I think that suffix is umbellatum, but it could be edule, no matter). In Malayalam the tree is Kashavu or kannavu and the flower has a lovely euphonious name: kaayampoo
We stop to study the tree and, at a later point, I look it up in my book (Neginhal sir, bless you wherever you are). But it is when I search India Biodiversity Portal later that I see an entirely unexpected connection with a small piece of musical history.
In my collection of old playing records is an EP from the 1969 Malayalam film, Nadhi, with an immensely popular song sung by that maestro, Yesudas.
Kaayampoo kannil vidarum
Kamaladhalam kavilil vidarum
(The kaayampoo blooms in your eyes
Lotus petals on your cheeks……)
Yours to listen to…
https://open.spotify.com/track/0Go3xe8Sdu27plq98uyxoz
This photo with three flowers: these are Shorea rox, Firmiana and the Ironwood tree, photo taken in March 2022
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