Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Links on pruning trees

http://pubs.ext.vt.edu/430/430-456/430-456.html

http://www.extension.umn.edu/distribution/horticulture/dg0628.html

http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/depts/hort/hil/ag29.html

Tree food sources

Need to check if this grows in Karnataka and which part:
http://www.flowersofindia.net/catalog/slides/Tree%20Bean.html

Murungai
http://www.moringafarms.com/growing_it.htm

Coconut

Palmyra Palm, Date Palm

The Mysore Raspberry is an interesting candidate to try and grow.

Barberry fig seeds are a good source of oil. This shrub is a cactus so should grow with very little water.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Impressions from Papua New Guinea

A friend got back after spending an year in Papua New Guinea full of interesting stories about the place. Apparently, folks there value pigs very highly. Men pay a bride price in pigs - and these are events all members of the community pay for with individual pigs or money. If a piglet lost its mother a nursing mother would breast feed it! And they are very superstitious of witchcraft. If someone died people who did not (at least pretend to) cry were liable to be accused of black magic and killed!

And he noticed many similarities between their language and Tamil - they use 'vA', 'pO' for 'come' and 'go', and 'neel eravA' for 'bring water'.  I told him that he should consider doing a Phd on a comparative study of Tamil and languages of PNG :-)

Lost a cow lately? Check if its in Komavaram!

Komavaram, according to T, is the home of heriditary cattle thieves (kallars). Apparently, whenever a resident needed a little bit of cash, he would go over to a village in neighboring Tanjavur at night and steal cattle. He would then tie them up in the forest and inform his chief of the location. The owner, on discovering the theft, would make a beeline to the chief of Komavaram. The chief would assure him that he would investigate the theft. The owner would be asked to pay an investigation fee and could collect the cattle at the specified location in the forest.
A percentage would be retained by the chief and the rest given to the thieves! Legend has it that a couple of them bet some other villagers that they would steal Robert Clive's horse and indeed they managed it. Clive learnt about kallars and their practices and has documented this in official memos from Clive to the viceroy(?).

Hindolam makes me hungry

One day when everyone else was sitting and eating lunch I did not join because I was not hungry. I was practicing on my flute and P asked me what I was playing. I said I was playing a kriti in Hindolam. Then T asked me why I was not eating and I replied that I wasn't hungry and playing makes me hungry. P turns to me and asks 'Hindolam vasiccha pasikkuma saar?' (Does one get hungry when one plays Hindolam).

Appa find me a village girl to marry

My friend V has been looking out for girl to marry his son. Initially he advised him to find a girl himself. His son said he did not have time to change costumes between song sequences like in the movies. Then V asked him what kind of girl he wanted. His son said he wanted a village girl because all the town girls walk around talking to themselves like a paitiyam.  Only when you went closer could you see the cell phone!