About Me

My photo
I'm a woman entering "the third chapter" and fascinated by the journey.

Sunday, December 22, 2019

The lost is found (and a preview of coming attractions)

Last winter, my supposed-to-last-me-the-rest-of-my-life one-terabyte external hard drive met a Sad Fate when it made sudden contact with the very hard tile floor of a Mexican beach house. Electronics do not do well with such treatment. Most of the files were backed up in other places, but not so, all the more recent photos. Sigh.

However, some of the photo files had indeed managed to sneak themselves into the hard drive of my laptop, where they were discovered when I opened a nondescript file. Photos from the January visit to the Roger Orellana Botanical Garden were hiding in (almost) plain sight. The gardens are not as breathtakingly beautiful as the Toledo Botanical Garden (or at least not in the January dry season), but they are one of the greenest places I have found in Merida.


With my departure for the tropics imminent, I am beyond excited, having been offered the opportunity to learn about the gardens and lead tours for English speakers. Education about tropical plants--for free? What self-respecting plant nerd would not sign up?

Part of the CICY research institute, the collections include a conservatory of desert plants from around the world,


a section including every Yucatecan palm species,


and of course numerous specimens of the agave that made 19th-century Merida one of the wealthiest cities in the world. Language lessons are included, since the informational signage includes not only the plant's scientific name but its common name in both Spanish and Maya.



Particularly interesting to me, however, are the medicinal and bee gardens. In the medicinal garden, plants are grouped and labeled by their uses in traditional medicine.


Part of the institute's work involves consulting with village shamans and attempting to isolate the compounds in particular plants that cure the conditions for which they are used. I am selfishly hoping to be present when some of the shamans visit the city, though I know approximately two words of Maya, the name of a bird and the name of the leaf that makes a favorite beverage. The shaman who blesses the bees makes interesting offerings: in addition to pottery and flowers, he gifts the cavity-nesting mellipona with tobacco and tequila.



This promises to be an interesting winter.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

I am particular interested in more posts regarding the medicinal herbs and the shaman. I also find that, if it is a picture I am very enamored with, posting and saving pics to facebook has been a lifesaver in retrieving from bad hard drives. Enjoy Mexico, look forward to you coming back to the land of sinus.

Rebecca said...

I don't know if I will manage to be at the site at the same time as any of the shamans (or if the researchers generally go to the villages instead), but I expect to learn quite a bit about the plants.