Last week we visited the Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Among the many and varied gardens was an enormous indoor tropical conservatory stocked with a huge variety of living tropical plants from around the world.
I couldn't take enough digital images -- there was so much color and variety! The experience of walking through the tropical garden is with me forever. Wandering in the presence of so many thriving tropical plants was exhilarating, soothing, and refreshing.
One tree in particular was irresistibly huggable: the breadfruit tree. There was something about the way it leaned over the path we were walking along . . . High up among the leaves we could see breadfruit.
Of course, as soon as we got home, I had to learn all about this tree:
- The cargo carried on the ill-fated 1787 trip of Captain William Bligh in the HMS Bounty was breadfruit trees. (The trees were all thrown overboard by the mutineers.)
- Latex is derived from numerous parts of the tree.
- Each breadfruit tree can produce about 200 large fruits per year.
- It is called breadfruit, because when roasted, the fruit smells something like bread.
Breadfruit tree bark is smooth-ish.
- Breadfruit replaces potatoes or pasta or bread in meals.
High above the floor of the Frederik Meijer tropical garden we could see a ripening breadfruit. (About the size of a cantaloupe melon.)
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