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April 1997
206
JOURNAL
OF THE
TREE
SOCIETY OF ZIMBABWE
P.O BOX 2128
HARARE
TREE LIFE
ANNUAL SUBS – NOW DUE
Happily it has not been necessary to increase our subs this year. Please
send in your $40 promptly.
MASHONALAND CALENDAR
Tuesday 1st April. Botanic Garden Walk.
We will meet Tom In the car park at 4.45 for 5 p.m. This month Tom will
start on the family Annonaceae. There will be a guard for the cars.
Sunday 20th April. In February rain washed out what would have been a
very interesting trip to the Dyke; as we really don’t want to miss
it, this month’s outing is planned for the same place. Directions:
Take the Mazowe road from Harare and turn left after the village to Mvurwi/Concession.
At about the 90km peg turn left at the Mvurwi sign and follow the narrow
tarred road. The Pembi Dam is on the left. At the BP garage in Mvurwi
turn left and continue for less than 1km. Turn left again into the Mtoroshanga
road and after 1.5km turn right into Sandford Road. We will meet Rob Croukamp
our leader, 11km down this road at 10.00 a.m.
Saturday 26th April. Mark’s Botanic Walk is cancelled this month.
Tuesday 6th May. Botanic Garden Walk.
Sunday 18th May.
NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
Notice is hereby given the 47th Annual General Meeting of the Tree Society
of Zimbabwe will be held on Sunday 18th May, 1997 at Mhowani Hills Farm,
Teviotdale.
AGENDA
1. Notice convening the meeting.
2. Apologies.
3. Minutes of the 46th AGM.
4. Matters arising.
5. Chairman’s report.
6. Treasurer’s report.
7. Election of committee members.
8. Any other business.
Any proposals/resolutions and nominations for office bearers should be
forwarded to P.O. Box 2128, Harare by Monday 12th May if possible, although
proposals will be accepted from the floor.
Saturday 24th May. Mark’s Botanic Walk.
MATEBELELAND CALENDAR
Sunday 6th April. To Nyamandhlovu to a farm run by Sandy and Philip Palmer
for an all day outing. Meet at the car park at Girls’ College for
a prompt departure at 8.30 a.m.
Sunday 4th May. Trip to Tendele River, S Matopos.
Monday 14th April. Urban trails in Circular Drive area. Meeting at 5-5.15
p.m. These lessons win take place on the second Monday of every month.
Directions: From the Old Esigodini Road turn into Fortunes Gate Road leading
to Circular Drive, continue along this road for 1.7 miles or 2.7km to
the assembly point on the right just beyond a hooped pipe fixed in the
ground.
Notice is hereby given that the Annual General Meeting of the Matabeleland
Branch of the Tree Society will take place at Girl's College at 7.30 for
8.00 p.m. on the 21st May 1997. Would those attending please come with
any suggestions, comments or criticisms which they may have and would
like to voice.
AETFAT 1997
What is AETFAT? The letters stand for the Association pour I’Étude
Taxomonique de la Flore d’Afrique Tropicale, i.e. the Association
for the Study of the Flora of tropical Africa, generally pronounced in
English “Eat fat”!
Every three years, a congress is held, which I believe alternates between
a venue in Africa and one outside it. The last congress was held in the
Netherlands and this year, the 15th Congress was held in Harare at the
University of Zimbabwe.
As it is probably the major event for botanists in Africa, I took time
off to attend for the 5 days and indeed it was well worth it. For four
days there were lectures, posters and symposia and on the Wednesday a
trip in a number of minibuses to the Great Dyke. A number of Tree Society
people attended, and three had major roles, namely Bob Drummond, Tom Muller
and Jonathan Timberlake.
Perhaps the most interesting thing for me was to see and in some cases
to actually meet well known botanists who for years have been merely names
in books or authorities attached to plant names. I was surprised by the
friendliness and interest shown to an amateur botanist like myself. A
large contingent came from Kew and another from South Africa.
I must admit that a number of papers were of a heavy scientific type.
I could have done with a briefing on cladistics before I attended, but
an equally significant number were reasonably understandable to this botanical
layman. With posters and lectures going on simultaneously it was often
difficult to decide which to attend.
One paper of interest was a proposal to combine the genus Colophospermum
with an Asian genus Hardwickia. This will mean a new name for mopane.
On the Thursday a dinner was arranged in a large tent in the Botanic Gardens.
The menu consisted of traditional African plants and animals, with the
Latin names helpfully listed.
The aperitif Included mopane worms – quite pleasant, even if the
heads are rather crunchy! Amongst the many long-term gains of the Congress
is the curation by specialists of the plant collections in the National
Herbarium.
All in all a most interesting week. This was followed by a trip to the
Eastern Highlands where we were lashed by continuous heavy rain throughout
and a week later the trip to find TricerateIIa, written up briefly in
last month’s Tree Life.
M.A.H.
REPORT ON THE VISIT TO THE MBALABALA BRACHYSTEGIA GLAUCESENS NATURAL
RESOURCE S RESERVE
On the 2nd of March a convoy of cars set out to Mbalabala from Girl's
College. Actually it was a rather spit convoy with some people opting
to go on ahead finding their own way. On the way we were treated to several
displays of bright red-flowering Aloe zebrina colonies, mostly just before
and then after Esigodini with some lovely clumps right next to the road
as we were approaching the granite hills near Mbalabala. We had some guti
in the hills during the morning but fortunately it was light so we did
not get rained out.
Jonathan had done a brief recce and he suggested parking off the main
road on a side road leading to a P.T.C. mast behind its fenced enclosure.
We didn’t get to the best part of the kopjies of the Reserve but
that will have to be done another time. We recorded a fair selection of
species – about 84 spp. of trees, shrubs and climbers. Of particular
interest were the 3 Gardenia, Gardenia resiniflua, Gardenia ternifolia
and Gardenia volkensii. Hibiscus mutatus with its white to pale purple
flowers was still giving a good show. Artabotrys brachypetalus and Hexalobus
monopetalus were conveniently growing side by side so we could study their
similarities and differences.
Unfortunately your Chairman chose this occasion to go bush happy or ‘Get
Lost’ for an hour or so, for which he most humbly apologizes for
any inconvenience or anxiety caused. Due to this faux pas many people
¬opted to go home early after their lunch.
Some observations on our outing to Mbalabala – perhaps we need to
make our outings more user friendly, especially if we are to attract and
not intimidate any new members who want to join our group. We should slow
down and explain every plant/tree that we see to everyone who is attending
the visit on the particular day. Also we need to carry a copy of the tree
book and also Wild's Dictionary of African & English plant names,
to check anything which we think is unusual. A case in point; a number
of Ormocarpum plants were seen which we thought looked different from
the usual Ormocarpum trichocarpum which we see around Bulawayo. Was it
perhaps Ormocarpum kirkii? On checking in Coates Palgrave when I got home
they were different only in having much longer leaves than the ones we
are used to, but the fruits were typical Ormocarpum trichocarpum, fairly
long and almost straight and not curled and hidden in the dry remains
of the petals.
However, Clerodendrum wildii was not in doubt. Having seen this species
so often when I lived in Harare I remember it well. This may be a new
record for this species; certainly the literature that I have does not
show it as occurring in the west of Zimbabwe. A specimen will be made
and a photograph taken to send to the herbarium in Harare. This sighting
was also unusual in that some of the specimens seen were definitely of
tree size, in the north, central and east of Zimbabwe it is only recorded
as being a shrub.
Anthon Ellert.
THE TALL, THE FAT, AND THE ANCIENT
Part one: The Tall
A recent copy of the National Geographic Magazine (January 1997) contains
an interesting article titled Tree Giants of North America, which includes
a brief account of the re-measurement of the world’s tallest-known
tree. This is a coast redwood, Sequoia sempervirens, discovered in northern
California in 1963 and measured by surveyors as 367,8 feet (112.11m),
and reported in the National Geographic of July 1964. The most recent
measurement, made in 1995 by climbers with a tape, has established the
true height of this tree as 365.5 feet (111.40m).
Now, what about other giant trees that have found their way into the record
books? The National Geographic of January 1997 lists maximum heights for
the other four of North America’s "big five” as:
Douglas fir, Pseudotsuga menziesii 329 feet (100.28m)
Sitka spruce, Picea sitchensis 315 feet (96.01m)
Giant sequoia, Sequoiadendron giganteum 310 feet (94.49m)
Western Hemlock, Tauga heterophylla 261 feet (79.55m)
Silvics of Forest Trees of the United States, compiled by HA Fowells (1965),
indicates a possible record of 385 feet (117.35m) for a Douglas fir (also
known as Oregon pine) felled in Washington State. When I was a forestry
student a press report on this tree was dismissed by our instructor as
“over-enthusiastic journalism”!
Australians are astonishingly reluctant to brag about their big trees,
and yet some remarkable records have come out of that country. In 1872
a mountain ash, Eucalyptus regnans felled in Victoria, measured 433 feet
(131.98m) to the point where the top had broken off in the fall. This
record is not widely accepted by Australians, but those who do accept
it point out that the missing top section could have made the whole tree
around 500 feet (152m) tall. A much more reliable measurement for a felled
Eucalyptus regnans was made in 1918 by no less a personage than the Surveyor-General
for the State of Victoria, who recorded the height as 374 feet (114m),
but even this has not gained wide acceptance in Australia. There are good
records for Eucalyptus regnans of 107m (351 ft), 104m (341 ft), 99m (325
ft) and 98m (322 ft). The present-day champion specimen of Eucalyptus
regnans stands in Tasmania, and is 99m (325 ft) tall.
Another eastern Australian eucalypt that occasionally reaches very great
heights is manna gum, or ribbon gum, Eucalyptus viminalis, and there is
today a standing specimen In Tasmania with a height of 92m (302 ft).
In western Australia the tallest species is karri, Eucalyptus diversicolor,
and there is a fairly reliable record of 341 feet (104m) for a specimen
felled in 1901. The present-day, tallest-known standing karri is 88m (289
ft).
Around 1910 a Portuguese forester from northern Angola visited the research
station where I was based, and related a remarkable figure of 140m (459
ft) for an afara, or limba, Terminalia superba, that he had measured after
felling in the rainforest. He must have seen the disbelief on the faces
of his listeners, for he repeated the figure and there are still, three
of us around who can vouch for what he said!
Zimbabwe is not noted for exceptionally tall trees, but heights of up
to 60m (161 ft) are attained in Chirinda Forest by Khaya anthotheca (red
mahogany), Lovoa swynnertonii, (brown mahogany), and possibly also Trichilia
dregeana (forest Trichilia). There have been exaggerated reports in the
past about the height of the Big Tree of Chirinda Forest (Khaya anthotheca)
with suggestions of 65m (213 ft) being fairly common. This tree was measured
by theodolite in 1939 and found to be 58.8m (193 ft), but by 1986 die-back
due to old age had reduced it to 54m (177 ft).
All of Zimbabwe's tallest trees are eucalypts, and heights of 74m (234
ft) have been recorded for Eucalyptus grandis (flooded gum) at Inodzi
near Penhalonga, and Tilbury Estate, Chimanimani. The next best have been
64m (210 ft) for Eucalyptus botryoides (southern mahogany) at Mountain
Home, Penhalonga, Eucalyptus microcorys (tallow-wood) at Inodzi, Eucalyptus
pilularis (black-butt) at Lemon Kop, Chimanimani and Eucalyptus regnans
(mountain ash) at Stapleford, Penhalonga. This last-mentioned tree was
not yet 27 years old at the time of measurement, and I expect it to become
the tallest in the country in due course; it may already be so for it
is now aged nearly 40.
(Next month 'The Fat') Lyn Mullin.
BOTANICAL GARDEN WALK: 4 March 1997
After two walks which had been cancelled because of rain, it was a pleasure
to resume the Botanic Garden walks and to hear Part 2 of Tom's discussion
of climbing plants.
Two main types of climbers were seen. There were plants which use their
petioles or side branches as support. These petioles or branches often
project at right angles (or even at a slightly wider angle) from the main
stem. Into this category falls the rather rare climber Pseudocalyx saccatus,
Embelia schimperi (Myrsinaceae) has petioles which harden into hook-like
structures after the leaf lamina has fallen, rather like Combretum mossambicense.
Two others seen were the Zimbabwe creeper, Podranea brycei, more often
seen around Harare as a garden plant. In this case the angled (opposite)
leaves provide support. Also seen was a large liana, Jasminum abyssinicum
which, like Jasminum fluminense, a fairly frequent climber found in riverine
vegetation, has 3-foliate leaves.
The other category was the climbers with tendrils. Two of these are Eastern
District species in the Rhamnaceae. Helinus mystacinus is a forest edge
species, which possesses tendrils at the edge of the lateral shoots. It
has a very similar-looking relative, Helinus integrifolius, which is more
widespread in Zimbabwe and occurs in woodland. Gouania longispicata is
another plant of the forest margin – this is a much more solid plant
than the two species of Helinus, but, again, it has tendrils at the end
of the lateral shoots.
Another form of support is provided by adventitious roots. The species
which showed this was Urera hypselodendron. This is a climbing and non-stinging
member of the nettle family, Urticaceae, again, confined in Zimbabwe to
the east.
Artabotrys is a genus well known for its unusual angular hooks. The common
Artabotrys brachypetalus is the one most often seen, often scrambling
in riverine vegetation. The hooks are initially the stalk which supports
the flowers. Once the flowering and fruiting is over the hooks persist.
Today, we looked at the rare eastern districts species Artabotrys monteiroae.
Finally, we looked at Rhus chirindensis. Although normally a shrub –
fairly common throughout Zimbabwe and certainly not confined to Chirinda
as the name might suggest – in this case its thick woody branches
were spreading horizontally to form a dense tangle. An extraordinary sight!
Once again, a most stimulating walk and we thank Tom for so regularly
giving up his time for the benefit of the society.
MAH
The multi-purpose Acacia albida (now Faidherbia albida) an asset to agriculture
in Africa.
Acacia albida (Faidherbia albida) is one of the largest species of Acacia
reaching 30m in height. It is a very diverse species which is widely distributed
throughout Africa in a variety of ecologies. Generally it is found at
lower altitudes, but it has been recorded at altitudes up to 1800m.
Mature trees have spreading branches and rounded crowns, with rough brown
bark. In younger specimens the bark is smoother and a greenish grey colour.
Young branches are ash white and distinctively zig¬zag in shape. The
thorns are straight, cream-coloured with brown tips and about 2cm long.
The grey green leaves are similar to other acacias and are shed during
the summer months (summer deciduous).
The flowers are carried on slender creamy-white spikes (4-14cm long) during
the winter months. The large reddish-brown, twisted pods (25 x 5cm long)
are shed with the leaves between September and October.
Acacia albida is recommended by agroforestry authorities as a multi-purpose
tree for a number of agricultural uses throughout the world.
Soil fertility
Acacia albida is most well known for its ability to restore and increase
soil fertility. Detailed measurements in West Africa have shown that 20-40
trees-ha provide nutrients equivalent to the prescribed rates of inorganic
fertiliser application. Its ability to provide these nutrients occurs
in a number of ways:
? It is a nitrogen-fixing species which nodulates with strains of Brachyrhizobium
that are present in most soils.
? The roots penetrate the deeper layers of soil taking up nutrients released
by rock weathering which would otherwise be lost by leaching. These nutrients
are then deposited on the surface by the leaves which break down rapidly
releasing the nutrients in the upper levels of the soil.
Inter-cropping
Acacia albida has for several centuries been used in traditional forms
of agriculture. It seems to be tailor-made for summer cropping. The effects
discussed above contribute substantially to its suitability in croplands.
Competition for light, water and nutrients is minimal because the trees
are dormant during the usual cropping season.
Statistical analysis of sorghum, millet and groundnuts grown under Acacia
albida indicate not only up to twice the yield, but also far superior
quality of crops.
Fodder
Cattle and game are known to browse the leaves and shoots of Acacia albida.
The most valuable source of food, however, is the pods which are shed
when other sources are scarce. The pods are rich in protein and carbohydrate
and can be stored for considerable periods of time before use.
Soil conservation
Acacia albida is a hardy species which can contribute significantly towards
limiting water and wind erosion. In addition the soil under Acacia albida
trees has better physical conditions including:
? Greater cohesion (related to organic carbon %)
? Higher water-holding capacity
? Better permeability and drainage
Firewood and fuel
The wood is a very good fuel with a high calorific yield. One disadvantage
compared to some other species is that it doesn’t coppice easily
(i.e. grow again after it is cut). The tree does, however, respond well
to pruning!
Timber
The timber is useful and durable and suitable for construction, implement
handles and carving.
Bee fodder
The flowers are a valuable source of pollen and nectar at a time of the
year when very few species are in flower. They can therefore contribute
towards achieving continuity in the supply of bee forage throughout the
year.
Fencing
Acacia albida can be useful in fencing as live fences, as a source of
fencing standards and for creating an impenetrable barrier by cutting
the thorny branches from large trees.
Acacia albida is undoubtedly an asset in any agricultural system. It is
an easy tree to propagate either from seed or from root cuttings. It responds
well to cultivation although the oft-quoted disadvantage of slow growth
rate is evident in many areas.
Without doubt the many advantages of this tree out-weigh the disadvantages.
Much work remains to be done in the area of genetic selection of varieties
most suitable for cultivation.
From: Farming World November 1996
TREES AND OTHER PLANTS OF DAVID LIVINGSTONE'S ZAMBEZI EXPEDITION 1858-1863
Following his great trans-Africa journey of 1853-1856 David Livingstone
was commissioned by the British Government to explore the lower Zambezi,
from the delta to the limit of navigation by steam launch, with a view
to opening up the interior of Central Africa to “commerce and civilization”.
He was appointed “Her Majesty's Consul at Quilimane at a salary
of £500 a year with £170 towards the expense of outfit”.
Other members of the expedition included surgeon-botanist Dr. (later Sir)
John Kirk (1832-1922), who was Livingstone’s second-in-command for
most of the expedition. Artist Thomas Baines, who left the expedition
after being unjustly accused by Livingstone of misappropriating supplies;
and Charles Livingstone, David's younger brother, who was appointed 'Moral
Agent' to the expedition but came out of it with a question mark against
his integrity.
Livingstone was fortunate in having the services of Kirk to collect and
identify plants of actual or potential economic importance, but he (Livingstone)
was no mean botanist himself. His journals and dispatches contain interesting
accounts of trees and other plants he encountered along the route of his
expedition on the Zambezi and Shire rivers – modern-day Mozambique,
Malawi, and Zambia. Sadly he does not seem to have spent much time on
the Zimbabwean side of the Zambezi!
Livingstone generally had to refer to the plants he encountered by their
local vernacular names because few of them had been described and named
scientifically at that time. But there are two problems here for anyone
trying to identify species from his journals:
1) Vernacular names tend to vary from one locality to the next, and
2) Livingstone’s spelling was not at all consistent, whether he
was referring to plants, places or people. In spite of these constraints,
it is not too difficult to identity practically all the plants mentioned
in Livingstone's Zambezi Journals, and they are listed below.
BAOBAB; 16 September 1858: “....l walked a little way to the South
West and found a baobab which Mr. Rae and I, measuring at about three
feet from the ground, found to be seventy two feet in circumference; it
was hollow and had a good wide high door to it. The space inside was nine
feet in diameter and about twenty feet high."
The baobab is Adansonia digitata – muuyu in Shona and umkhomo in
Ndebele – and this particular tree that Livingstone measured at
Shiramba on the lower Zambezi was relocated In 1955, when its diameter,
at the original height, was found to be 7.17m , an increase of 18cm in
107 years.
BOMA. 4 August 1860: "...Boma, an edible fruit with plenty of oil:
very soft wood: by boiling it yields largely.” This journal entry
was made on the overland part of the expedition between the 'Kebrabasa'
(Cabora Bassa) Gorge and the Victoria Falls, four days march from the
Falls.
Boma is Ricinodendron rautanenii well known in the Kalahari sand areas
of Zimbabwe and Zambia. The Ndebele name is umgoma and the tree bears
a superficial resemblance to the baobab. The soft, light wood is often
used for carving wooden masks.
BUAZE. 31 May 1859 in Dispatch no.2 to the Earl of Malmesbury: “We
propose sending seeds and living plants of the Buaze to India. It becomes
a bush and even a tree, yielding a crop annually by being pollarded…
The seeds yield oil similar in properties to linseed oil. The fibre is
worth between £50 and £60 per ton."
Journal entry 1 November 1858 - "Buaze in flower. It is like a pea
flower and has a very nice scent."
4 January 1860 - "Dr Kirk found the Buaze to be a Polygala …”
Buaze is, in fact, the violet tree, Securidaca longipedunculata at one
time sought after for the strong fibre obtained from its bark.
COFFEE. 10 September 1858, in Dispatch no.11: "...or a coffee tree
in blossom: and was informed that a foolish prejudice prevails in the
country that he who cultivates coffee cannot enjoy happiness."
The coffee that Livingstone saw could have been Coffea arabica, brought
into the lower Zambezi region by Portuguese colonists or by Arab slavers.
It could also have been the wild Coffea racemosa, which has been cultivated
for many years in Mozambique and produces a good coffee with its own distinctive
flavour. Livingstone's Journal entry for 3 October 1859 notes “Wild
coffee found yesterday …”
COLORYNA. 24 January 1861 “Coloryna, a Rhamnaceaous tree found by
Dr. K. Some kinds cause quick fermentation.” This journal entry
was written at the coast and could have been a reference to Colubrina
asiatica, a scrambling shrub of coastal Mozambique, but the note on “quick
fermentation” is obscure. Other genera and species of the family
Rhamnaceae that Livingstone might have been referring to are Ziziphus
abyssinica, Ziziphus mucronata and Berchemia discolor. All are shown in
Coates Palgrave’s Trees of Southern Africa as occurring down to
the Zambezi delta, and all have edible fruits that could be used in the
fermentation of alcoholic beverages. Ziziphus abyssinica is known in Shona
as musawu, while Ziziphus mucronata is muchecheni in Shona and umphafa
in Ndebele. Berchemia discolor is the well-known munyii (Shona) or umnyiyi
(Ndebele) of the Zambezi Valley and south eastern lowveld. If ‘Coloryna'
refers to a Ziziphus, one would expect it to be distinct from macaa or
jujube, which Livingstone noted around the lower Zambezi during this same
period in other writings.
CONGO BEANS. 16 June 1863: “Voandzeia or Congo beans still growing,
but not a soul to be seen.” This was written during the exploration
of the Shire River, which drains Lake Malawi into the Zambezi and then
to the sea.
The Congo bean is Voandzeia subterranea, the well-known nyimo (Shona)
or indlubu (Ndebele), a native of West Africa, which has been widely cultivated
since ancient times.
COTTON. Dispatch no.111 10 September 1858: “The cotton grown in
this country is of two kinds, that called Tonje manja, as the added adjective
implies, is an imported variety and in the delta has a very fine long
staple. The other, Tonje caja, is native and has a very short pile which
clings to the seed and feels more like wool in the hand than cotton. Native
cloth of this very highly valued ...Patches of cotton a few yards square
are seen in most native gardens.”
The dispatch was written from Tete, but there are numerous references
to cotton in Livingstone's Journals. The spelling of the name for imported
cotton, Tonje manja, is one of numerous inconsistencies in Livingstone’s
writings; usually, and probably correctly, he spelt it as Tonje manga.
Gossypium hirsutum, which originated in the Americas, was probably imported
by the Portuguese or Arab slavers. Tonje caja, the indigenous Gossypium
herbaceum var. africanum has been cultivated from ancient times, but is
now largely replaced by Gossypium•hirsutum because of the latter's
longer lint.
COWITCH. 2 June 1860: “People in this hilly region collect quantities
of the cow-itch pods and burn off the prickles before extracting the beans
as food. It is extensively used as an article of food, though always quite
wild. One kind is cut into thin slices before being boiled."
4 October 1861. “Cow itch very annoying.” Livingstone observed
the use of cow itch pods as food in both the Zambezi and the Shire valleys,
and there is no doubt at all that he was referring to what we know today
as buffalo bean, Mucuna coriacea or Mucuna pruriens. There are about 35
species of Mucuna in the tropics and subtropics, and one variety of Mucuna
pruriens is the Florida velvet bean, a useful fodder. The Shone names
for buffalo bean are hohozhwa hurukuru, or uriri.
FIG. 10. 28 July 1860: “breakfast under a large fig tree on plain.”
This was written about seven days before reaching Victoria Falls from
Tete and Cabora Bassa, and the fig could have been any one of 8-9 species
of Ficus that occur in the Zambezi Valley as large trees. Ficus sur, Ficus
natalensis, Ficus sansibarica and Ficus sycomorus would have been among
the figs Livingstone encountered most commonly on his overland trip.
These anecdotes are extracted from an interesting document researched
and written by Lyn Mullin.
To be continued.
COMMITTEE MEMBERS’
CONTACT TEL. NUMBERS
Harare
Mark Hyde Home 745263
Cell 091 233751
Ruth Evans Home 331198
Terry Fallon Home 778789
Eva Keller Home 339368
Richard Oulton Home 882792
Mimi Rowe Home 882719
The Tree Society’s e-mail address is
petra@mango.zw (Ruth Evans)
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