The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1956, Side 30

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1956, Side 30
28 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Summer 1956 leaves but the leaves are thicker and have a grayish-green down on the underside. The Swamp Immortelle grows to a height of only about thirty or forty feet but spreads much wider than the Mountain Immortelle. This is as if it had been ordered. At sea level the temperature is much higher than on the slopes of the hills and more shade is required. In Trinidad the Swamp Immortelle is locally called the “water mamma”. Another shade tiee, the Samanea Saman, has a legend about it but it is different from that of the Immor- moisture from the air during the day and transpire a certain amount of it at night). People discovered long ago that everything grows under a Saman tree just about as well and in some cases better than in the open. The na- tives gave these facts their own inter- pretation and came to the conclusion that the damp blankets and the un- usual fertility of the soil under the branches of the Saman tree could only mean either that raindrops filtered from the branches during the night or that water from the leaves made its way down the tree during the night An old Saman tree in Trinidad, west of Government House, in the central part of the city. In one direction it spreads its branches one hundred and eighty-seven feet. telles. The legend is that it rains all night under a Saman tree. There are two unchallengeable facts about the Saman tree upon which this legend is based. Travellers discovered in the early days that if they laid their blan- kets under a Saman tree they would wake up early in the morning chilled and wet as if they had been sleeping on wet ground or it had rained during the night. (Many tropical trees absorb and into the soil above the roots and thus moistened the blankets. The tree is very commonly called the “rain tree” throughout the Caribbean and in Co- lombia and Venezuela. The Saman tree is also called the “cow tamarind” but this is not based upon a legend. The fruit of the Sam- an tree, a large pod about eight inches long and an inch thick, is commonly used food for cattle. It is called a tarn-

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