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March 2000
241
JOURNAL
OF THE
TREE
SOCIETY OF ZIMBABWE
P.O BOX 2128
HARARE
TREE LIFE
SUBS ARE DUE ON 1ST APRIL AND THE CURRENT UNHAPPY STATE OF AFFAIRS MAKES
IT NECESSARY TO INCREASE THEM TO $120 PER ANNUM.
MASHONALAND CALENDAR
Tuesday 7 March. Botanic Garden Walk at 4.45 for 5 p.m. We will meet Tom
in the car park. There will be a guard for the cars.
Sunday 19 March. Marussino Farm in the Trelawney area is the home of Sandy
and Mike Potts and although we last visited them in November 1995 a return
visit to this popular venue will be welcome. Directions: From Harare take
the Lomagundi Road over the Great Dyke. At the 68km peg turn left into
Mpinga Road and continue for 15km to Trelawney. Go straight over the crossroads
and railway line on to Glen Esk Road which is gravel, continue for 11.8km
and the farm is on the left. Total distance from Harare is about 95km
and about 1½ hours driving time. Plan to arrive at 9.30 with lunch
for an all day outing. Saturday 25 March. Mark's walk will be at 2.30
p.m. at Arundel School. We hope to explore the area around the dam and
any other areas of interest. On arrival at the School gates, the guard
will direct Tree Society members to the place to park.
Tuesday 4 April. Botanic Garden Walk.
Sunday 16 April. Chabweno Farm in the Enterprise area.
Saturday 29 April. Mark's Walk.
MATABELELAND CALENDAR
Sunday 5 March. Either to Umgusa or the Randall's on the Victoria Falls
Road to look at acacias. Meet at Girls' College at 8 for a prompt departure
at 8.30 a.m. Bring lunch and your chair, etc.
Sunday 2 April. Besna Kobila / Quaringa.
MAPOR ESTATES – ODZI SOUTH
Saturday 22nd January
The Mapor campsite is situated amongst magnificent huge granite domes,
and I think it's safe to say it would be impressive to most folk, even
if not biased 'Odzi-ites'. The rains have been good since New Year, the
bush is thriving, and this, combined with a sunny day, made for a good
outing. Our party was only 9 strong, and I have to say this was a real
treat. A few days before, some of us were privileged enough to tag along
with a SA Bot. Soc. party on a Bunga Forest outing. There were about 30
of us on a single file path. Scientific names don't cope well on the broken
telephone system that this necessitated – but the forest was great.
Mapor is in the middleveld – the altitude being ± 1000 m.
We spent our first morning meandering around the boulders of a nearby
kopjie, the novices scribbling furiously to record the knowledge so easily
exuded by the 'old hats'. From these scribblings I now write.
Vitellariopsis ferruginea was an early and regular find. It has a somewhat
restricted distribution to the upper Save region. The bushes were quite
striking, with beautiful soft bronze new growth, clustered at the ends
of branches. Green (apparently edible) fruit, similar to small unripe
peaches, but covered in brownish hairs, were found on some plants. Not
sure about the reference to a gourd in the common name of 'Gourd Milkwood'
– the milk was there, but these fruit weren’t very much like
'miniature gourds' to me. The fruit is said to be single seeded, but having
collected some, and recently peeled them, I found that the seed was quite
deeply divided longitudinally and very easily fell into two separate halves.
Bridelia mollis and Friesodielsia obovata were regular and potentially
confusing finds. Fortunately we met them both often enough to firmly commit
to our cranial jellies the green leaf smell + stipules of Bridelia mollis,
and the aromatic stipuleless-ness of 'friesel diesel’.
The Mapor figs had us slightly foxed, but we decided one was definitely
a knobbly fig – Ficus sansibarica – with projections on the
branches and trunk, and spear shaped leaves clustered at the end of the
branches. Ficus abutilifolia was less tricky, with large round pink veined
leaves and pale grey snaking roots hugging a boulder. We encountered another
fig on Orasi, and settled on Ficus stuhlmannii – a lowveld fig with
patterned leaf undersides that look as if they have had lace stuck onto
them.
A little (± 15cm) sensitive Oxalis sp. (Biophytum sp.) with tiny
white flowers was put through its movements. I think we all had a touch.
The leaves radiated out from the top of its stem – sort of like
a helicopter blade, with the flowers sticking up above them – a
Rasta style helicopter. There was some discussion as to exactly how a
plant evolves this fascinating mode of defence. Is it particularly delicious,
or is this just one of many possible solutions to avoid being munched?
We pondered too over an Acalypha sp. (?) with its monoecious flowering
system. The final decision was, I think, that it was a more advanced method
of flowering to separate the sexes like this. Margaritaria discoidea,
common around Mapor, is another example, being dioecious – perhaps
even one step up the evolutionary ladder if the sexes are on separate
trees? And not only are the sexes separate, but the flowers are really
no great shakes to look at – for humans anyway. The 3-balled fruit
of Margaritaria discoidea harbour distinct metallic blue/green seeds –
perhaps too small to be threaded for a necklace, but certainly worth a
try!
Lagynias dryadum was common, displaying a few creamy scented flowers and
its droopy, calyx crowned fruit. Other Rubiaceae members included Tricalysia
niamniamensis and Rothmannia fischeri, with its armpit domatia forming
distinct bumps along the midrib on the upper surface.
We found one tree that we ended up calling a sand papery Acokanthera.
Some leaves were very coarse, whilst others were smooth and shiny. I believe
it's now been positively I.D-d as Acokanthera rotundata, so we'll ignore
the very restricted distribution maps on that one!
We brushed up against two species of the stinging nettle creeper –
Tragia sp. (?). The one found on the slopes of Orasi mountain had a more
upright character – we felt it first and found it later. It literally
shone silver in the sun with stinging hairs. These are apparently used
traditionally to cause sexual excitement. Not sure about the 'sexual'
bit, but there was some excitement on contact – the Harare bunch
chickened out of any further studies! Pity really. Obetia tenax –
the tree nettle – was also found on Orasi, some leaves covered in
larvae that are obviously nettle proof.
Hymenocardia acida’s golden gland dots on the leaf under surface
were particularly pleasing through the magnifying lens, and the bright
pinky-orange fruit of Ximenia caffra caused some serious face squeezing
on tasting. I only found out afterwards that the seed inside is more palatable
than the flesh, and heaps easier on the facial muscles.
Other finds included Ochna puberula – the granite Ochna, Dalbergia
nitidula and Dalbergia melanoxylon. I recently rescued two fairly large
stumps of Dalbergia melanoxylon from a neighbour's cleared tobacco land.
I’ve had them cut into stunning floor tiles, with the very dark
plum heartwood surrounded by the pale yellow sapwood. Whilst showing one
of these to a friend, learnt that Dalbergia melanoxylon has a CITES Appendix
1 listing! It is supposed to be as protected as the elephant, due to demand
for the heartwood as black piano keys, small ornaments and woodwind musical
instruments. The question is, of course, how do you enforce this protected
state, especially if people don't know about it?
To end – at last – I must just thank the Harare Tree Society
folk for such a great weekend, and for sharing their knowledge so readily
and repeatedly. We’ll be working out ways to get you all back here.
Lynne Evans
MAPOR – DAY 2
Day two brought the party on to what appeared to be old tobacco lands
and as the Odzi and Maranki districts are in a rain shadow influenced
by the Vumba, the regeneration of the area is patchy and fairly slow.
Most of the common colonisers are present being Dichrostachys cinerea,
Terminalia sericea and Ziziphus mucronata while a number of annuals are
present, one of the commonest being Ocimum sp. – wild Basil which
has a pleasing odour as well as being used in traditional cultures as
a meat flavouring. Another common annual is the stud thorn Dicerocaryum
senecioides, the common name being derived from the hard pair of short
spines on the seed capsule. The plant when immersed in water becomes very
slimy and has found uses from a soap substitute to a lubricant for childbirth.
Along the base of Orasi, a huge chunk of granite which at 1530 meters
broods over most of Mapor Estates, the woodland remains untouched and
has wide variety of trees and shrubs. With the copious runoff from summer
rainstorms, several damp cool overhangs occur providing a cool damp habit
for Vitellariopsis ferruginea with the typically reddish brown appearance.
And a large single specimen of Ficus stuhlmannii, the features of growth
pattern and deep green colour of the foliage being most obvious to those
perched above the toiling team below. From time to time, wafts of chatter
from the excited Mutare(ites) / Odzi(ites) floated up to those of use
perched above on a large flat rock – it is encouraging to note that
the interest in Latin names is not dead!
Partly obscured by various of the Grewia sp., a shallow damp cave with
patchy evidence of bushman paintings formed a useful breathing point,
with a small Ficus natalensis hanging from a fault in the overhanging
boulder having caught our attention. And in a damp place Mark also noted
a single specimen of Fagaropsis angolensis with the typical gland dotted
leaf margin. With time constraints only a few hardy souls ventured further
up the increasing steep contours (later study of the 1:50000 map showed
how steep it really is!) only to be stopped by a sheer wall of granite.
To the right is a delightful untouched valley, entry to which is guarded
by several large Tree Nettles – Obetia tenax. The smooth grey trunks
and stiff looking leaves detract the eyes from the harsh spines that literally
cover this large member of the URTICACEAE. Sue and Lynne having already
ex¬perienced the effects of the normal nettle – Girardinia diversifolia,
happily accepted that this one is a no-no! In this tiny wonderland with
an enormous Paper Bark – Commiphora marlothii close to the entrance
and a wall of sheer lichen covered granite wall beyond complete with a
line of Sterculia quinqueloba, forms a superb natural garden.
Sadly there was not enough time to explore the area any further –
possibly the Holmans might let us have another try. Another great day
and thanks to Jenny and Frank for suggesting the area and I'm afraid the
swimming pool and not the vegetation won my interest for the afternoon.
A. MacNaughtan
ODZI: MAPOR ESTATE DAY 3:
31st JANUARY 2000
With the number of Harare members dwindling, but boosted slightly by Sue
Fawcett from Mutare and Jenny Holman from Mapor, we visited the Odzi River
on our last full day. This is a rich site with rocky places, streams,
ephemeral pools amongst the rocks and riverine vegetation. The altitude
was 900 m, fairly low.
Near the river was a typical species of the SE lowveld, Breonadia salicina
(Matumi). Small trees of Holarrhena pubescens (Jasmine tree) with its
characteristic chunky bark were present in rocky places and some fine,
large, examples of Diospyros mespiliformis (Ebony Diospyros).
A more unusual species seen was Ficus stuhlmannii (Lowveld fig). We had
seen this the day before. This has a characteristic underside to its leaf
with greyish net-veining. Its bark is also very dark-coloured and rough
– not at all like the more typical smoothish, green or yellowish
barks we more often see.
Common at Mapor is the somewhat local species, Lagynias dryadum. This
occurs at low or medium altitudes in the eastern half of Zimbabwe. It
belongs to the Rubiaceae and indeed has opposite leaves and interpetiolar
stipules. Flowers were rare but a few were found and are greenish-yellow.
The fruits are distinctive and hang down on pendulous pedicels.
Two herbs which were new to me were seen and later kindly identified by
Bob Drummond. One is a blue-flowered Rubiaceae called Pentodon pentandrus.
The other was Ethulia conyzoides. Both were along side streams which were
running near to the river itself.
A very pretty herb seen was Tricliceras tanacetifolium. This is a relative
of our common Tricliceras longepedunculatum, the Pimpernel, but this one
has yellow flowers. Even more remarkable are the leaves which are deeply
dissected (2-pinnatifid).
As usual, in wet habitats in Zimbabwe, there were a number of introduced
species. A species of Blackjack, Bidens bipinnata, which seems to be everywhere
in Zimbabwe now, was present in abundance. The introduced water fern,
Azolla filiculoides, floated in streams and ponds.
After lunch we drove away from the river to a rocky hill known as Chiore.
Of interest here was a large baobab right on top of the hill, which Jenny
pointed out to us. We did not climb up to it but instead walked around
the base of Chiore looking at the trees growing among the large boulders.
Here, various new species came to light. Of interest was Trema orientalis
(Pigeon wood), Tabernaemontana elegans (Toad tree) and a climber with
small creamy-yellow flowers, Gymnema sylvestre.
During the weekend, we saw several times very poor material of a 3-foliolate
Rutaceae – probably either a Teclea or Vepris. At the base of Chiore,
we at last found good material and a decent pressed specimen was collected,
although unfortunately there were no flowers or fruits; this plant is
unidentified at the moment. Shortly after, we found a second species,
possibly Teclea nobilis, although again this awaits identification.
On the drive back, through heavy rain at this stage, Jenny showed us a
fine fruiting specimen of Hymenocardia acida (Heart fruit).
All in all, it was a memorable and botanically rich 3 days at Mapor. The
rains held off until the third day – indeed the energy-sapping,
rather moist, heat in the afternoons was more of a problem! There was
much of interest and no doubt we will be back.
Our thanks go to the Holmans’ for their warm hospitality. It was
also very nice to have the very enthusiastic people from Mutare join us
– someone on every day.
MAH
ODZI POSTSCRIPT: Acokanthera rotundata
NEW TO THE E DIVISION
On the first day at Odzi, we found a tree with milky juice and opposite
leaves, some of which were exceptionally rough. Could this be Acokanthera
rotundata, we wondered? An odd thing about it was that although some leaves
were rough, others on the same tree were entirely smooth. The distribution
map in Coates Palgrave also suggested the species was unlikely.
On return to Harare, I compared the specimen with those in the Herbarium.
It was a very good match – the Herbarium specimens also showed the
same feature of mixed rough and smooth leaves. Bob Drummond also confirmed
the name.
As regards the distribution, although most of the specimens come from
the Matopos (W division), it has been found sporadically in the Northern
division (these specimens were not available and I therefore don't know
specifically where it has been found). And rarely in the Southern division
(near Lake Mutirikwe and from Bikita District). Our Odzi material extends
the range considerably and is a new record for the E Division.
MAH
THE MUKAMBA ON THE HIGHVELD
There are two sorts of bean that are interesting to a wider circle than
cooks and market¬ gardeners. One is the mahogany bean, pitch black,
with what looks like a crest of red sealing wax on the end of it. These
beans are about the size of the top joint of one's thumb, and grow six
or eight in a pod – quite one of the most beautiful things you can
see amongst many beautiful products of bush and tree.
J. PERCY FITZPATRICK (1892) – THROUGH MASHONALAND WITH PICK AND
PEN
Every now and then a tree will turn up in the most unlikely place, and
one is left wondering how and why – questions that are seldom answered
satisfactorily. And yet it is remarkable how full of surprises Zimbabwe's
highveld can be – the mopane near Beatrice, the Marula and the sausage
tree between Beatrice and Chivhu, the sandilboom trees near Headlands.
These are all lowveld trees that shouldn't be where they are, but there
they stand for all the world to see.
One of these anomalies is the mukamba tree 58.4 kilometres out of Harare
on the Bulawayo road, between Norton and Selous. The altitude is 1340
metres, which is considerably above its normal altitudinal limit of around
1000 metres. The mukamba, Afzelia quanzensis, is the well-known mahogany
of the lowveld and its fringes, but there it is, an unexpected intruder
on the highveld, somewhat battered by road-making equipment for it stands
only a few metres off the edge of the tar on the north side of the road.
In June 1987 it was 13.7 metres tall, with a diameter of 81.7 cm and a
crown spread of 12 metres – not very impressive statistics, but
if you consider the altitude it is remarkable that the tree should have
been there at all.
Further down the road, near Chegutu, other speci¬mens of mukamba can
be seen here and there as lone trees left standing in croplands, but this
is in a lower and warmer region representing the general upper limits
of the species. The tree near Kilometre 58 is at the extreme altitudinal
limit of the species range, and periodically it may fall to produce its
well-known pods with their black-and-red seeds.
The most famous mukamba tree in Zimbabwe is the one at Amandundumela in
the Gwayi Forest area, immortalized by June Farquhar in her book The Mukamba
Tree, which was published in 1974. This tree was 24 metres tall, with
a bole diameter of 1.44 metres, in March 1987. And at Gwaai Ranch in the
Chiredzi district there was another large specimen in July 1985, also
24 metres tall, but 1.12 metres in bole diameter. Gwaai Ranch has since
become the Nyahombwe Resettlement Area, and the tree is located near the
Dzapera dip, but there is so much felling of mukamba in that part of the
country for huge woodcarvings of hippo that the long-term survival of
this specimen is doubtful. It may have already gone by now.
Lyn Mullin
BOTANIC GARDEN WALK:
TUESDAY 8th FEBRUARY 2000
We were very pleased to see Tom again, back from an operation in South
Africa and restored to health. Before we began the walk, Andy gave Tom
a small gift to thank him for his continuing to lead us in the monthly
walks for yet another year.
On the walk today Tom took us through what was probably the last part
of the Euphorbiaceae.
We first looked at Schinziophyton rautanenii (formerly Ricinodendron rautanenii),
the Manketti tree, or in Ndebele, Mugongo. This is a beautiful species
with its digitate, discolourous leaves, which are dark green above and
pale beneath. The trunk is grey and smooth, appearing almost swollen and
with faint transverse ridges. It is generally found on Kalahari sand,
but Tom pointed out that it is not confined to this, but also sometimes
occurs on cretaceous sands, for example in Mozambique.
A lens helped to reveal two interesting spot-characters. Meg Coates Palgrave
pointed out two green dots, possibly glands, right in the centre of the
leaf at the point from which the leaflets radiate.
A further useful character is that the lower side of the leaf is stellately
hairy. Some other species in the family have this too and it can be a
useful confirmatory character. For example, all the species of Croton
do (and other species you might confuse with Croton do not, for example
Macaranga mellifera or Alchornea laxiflora). Another species with numerous
stellate hairs on the underside is Neoboutonia macrocalyx, seen not long
ago on one of our E Districts trips.
Schinziophyton is, of course, very unusual in the family in having digitate
leaves, although some, for example, Ricinus, the castor-oil plant do have
leaves which are palmately lobed.
No one was able to explain the origin of the English name – Manketti
tree or Manketti nut. Can any reader make a suggestion?
In the forest section, we saw two interesting shrubs. One was Erythrococca
polyandra, (Forest red-berry) a rain forest species. It has a rather larger
leaf than the other two species of Erythrococca (Erythrococca menyhartii
and Erythrococca trichogyne) and the leaves have a whitish margin. Tom
mentioned that it occurs up to 2000 m in altitude and, in particular,
at Chirinda Forest.
Another interesting species is Andrachne ovalis (Insecticide root). This
is rare in Zimbabwe; Tom has only seen it at Cecil Kop in Mutare. Tom
mentioned that in the Gardens, the plants only last 3-4 years but continue
to seed themselves. The species is shrub-sized with glossy small leaves
and was bearing the typical 3-lobed fruit of the Euphorbiaceae.
In forest understorey grows Alchornea hirtella, (Forest bead-string),
the rain forest equivalent of the low-altitude Alchornea laxiflora (the
Lowveld bead-string). This occurs, for example, on Mt Nyangani.
0n next to some spiny succulent Euphorbia. Euphorbia ingens (Candelabra
tree) is probably the most common large succulent Euphorbia and occurs
in a wide range of habitats and at a wide range of altitudes. The magnificent
one in the Botanic Gardens had whorled branches and lacked completely
the ‘holes’ where branches had fallen off, which were such
features of the next two species.
Euphorbia cooperi (Lesser candelabra tree) with its more curving candelabra-like
branches is well known and is widespread throughout Zimbabwe, although
it is less common than Euphorbia ingens. It perhaps prefers somewhat lower
attitudes than ingens. The branches are deciduous and after falling leave
‘holes’ in the trunk which are spirally or irregularly arranged
around the trunk.
The next and somewhat similar species, Euphorbia confinalis, had similar
curved branches, but the remaining leaves and the 'holes’ where
the former leaves were vertically above one another.
Euphorbia halipedicola is also a bit like Euphorbia cooperi in appearance
but was yellowish- green and the stem ridges had distinct wavy margins.
It is a rare species, confined to the Save valley.
Euphorbia persistentifolia has 4-angled, somewhat square stems and, as
the name suggests, has more persistent leaves than is usual with the large
succulent Euphorbia spp.; and this specimen did have a number of smallish
leaves congregated near the apex of the branches. Tom mentioned that it
occurs in the Zambezi Valley on Karoo sediments and on hills.
The evening ended with an interesting session, looking at some S African
trees, which included Heywoodia lucens (Stink ebony), which occurs in
Natal and in the Lebombo Mountains.
Finally, some exotic trees were seen, including Tectona grandis (Burma
teak) and Pterocarpus indicus.
Once again, it was a great opportunity to learn more about Euphorbiaceae
in Zimbabwe and our thanks as usual go to Tom.
MAH
OBSERVING BEE BEHAVIOUR
I was pleased to have received some response to my article on bees in
Tree Life. However, some respondents during their observations were unsure
as to what the honeybees were actually collecting from the flowers. Closer
observation of honeybee activity can reveal what they are up to. Honeybees
collect three categories of substances from plants:
• nectar which they convert into honey and which is their source
of energy;
• pollen, to which they add enzymes and mix with honey and use mainly
as a source of proteins together with minerals, fats, trace elements etc.
and, finally,
• plant resins (known as propolis), which are used to waterproof,
seal and sterilise their hives.
Nectar is collected from the plant nectaries, either floral or extra floral
as the case may be. Sometimes honeydew from sap sucking insects is collected
by honeybees and converted into honey, as is sap from wounds in plants
such as sugarcane. Pollen is collected either deliberately or incidentally
in the nectar gathering process. In the latter case it is sometimes deliberately
discarded before the forager returns to the hive.
The various resins and waxes used as propolis are from many sources such
as the sticky covering of unopened leaf or flower buds, or sap from wounds
on the plants. Bees are selective in the collection of this material,
preferring substances high in aromatic volatiles.
Honey bees are what are referred to as flower constant, that is the individual
worker bee will remain constant, working one particular species for as
long as it continues to provide the sought after nectar or pollen, and
they do not haphazardly flit from one plant species to another.
Foraging honeybees collecting only nectar go directly to the nectaries
and thrust their mouthparts into them and suck up the nectar. The pumping
action of the abdomen as the bee takes in a load of nectar is easily discernible.
Pollen foragers are more active on the flowers, spending most of their
time on the anthers, crawling over them and apparently even inducing dehiscence
by biting them. Collected pollen is transferred to the pollen baskets
(corbicula) on the hind legs and these pollen loads are easily seen. This
pollen transfer is sometimes done in mid-air and pollen collectors can
often be seen hovering in front of the flowers while this transfer takes
place.
Watching honeybees foraging can be quite fascinating, especially pollen
collectors which have different techniques for different flower species.
For instance, in collecting pollen from Dichrostachys cinerea bees rapidly
run round and round on the surface of the basal yellow flowers picking
up the pollen on their body hairs, moving quickly from flower to flower
and then resting to transfer pollen from their bodies to the corbicula
on their hind legs. However, when collecting pollen from Peltophorum africanum,
bees scramble over the anthers of the flower and then back off, hovering
in front of the flower while transferring pollen in mid-air before they
visit the next flower. Once the strategies for each flower are known,
it can even be ascertained from a distance what the bees are up to. As
bees often work flowers on the canopies of large trees, a pair of binoculars
may be necessary to observe them.
Pollination is a fascinating subject and much study has gone into the
process as far as plants of commercial interest are concerned, but even
with these the whole picture has not yet been worked out in many cases.
Strategies used by plants to ensure cross-pollination (even self-pollinated
plants have mechanisms favouring cross-pollination) are quite incredible
in many species. The ecological relationships with pollinating can be
truly amazing. Charles Darwin in 1877 wrote a book, The Various Contrivances
by which Orchids are Fertilized by Insects, which is an enthralling publication.
He later, in 1889, wrote a further book entitled The Effects of Cross
and Self Fertilization in the Vegetable Kingdom, where he proved conclusively
and dramatically the importance of pollination in the perpetuation of
vigour maintenance of plant species. Much of the work on plant pollination
since his time is based upon the theories he promulgated. Little has been
added to the knowledge of pollination requirements of some species since
his work was published. An amazing man – an amazing subject.
P. TAYLOR P 0 Box 242, Banket.
RECRUITMENT DRIVE FOR NEW MEMBERS Attached to this Tree Life is an application
form for membership. Please pass it on to a friend who may like to join
the Tree Society and learn about our vegetation, which after all is so
vital a part of other outdoor interests such as wild life, birds, insects,
etc.
We need new members and ideas for increasing membership are welcome.
Our address is:
P 0 Box 2128, Harare.
The Tree Society e-mail address is trees@mango.zw
COMMITTEE MEMBERS’
CONTACT TEL. NUMBERS
Harare
Mark Hyde Home 745263
Cell 0912 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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