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This is to inform you that Tom Muller will holding one of his regular
monthly walks in the Botanic Gardens on Saturday morning (tomorrow, May
2nd) at 11 am.
We will meet in the usual place, namely in the carpark at the Botanic
Gardens.
Entry should be free if you say you are attending a Tree Society meeting.
Tom’s subject will be the second instalment on the Combretum family.
Mark Hyde
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The Tree Society has been asked by David Hasluck if we can visit Lanark
Game Park (which is off the Beatrice Road to the south of Harare) in order
to identify and label the trees.
The day for this has been fixed for this coming Sunday, 26 April.
I am looking for a small group (maximum of about 10 people) to carry
out this exercise. While a detailed knowledge of trees would be useful,
it won’t be essential as I am sure there will be plenty of clerical
and labeling work to be done.
The plan is to arrive at 9.30 am and we will then work seriously identifying
and labeling the trees.
David will be organizing a braai for those who attend.
I think that this should be an enjoyable and interesting day and a good
opportunity to get to know the vegetation of Lanark Game Park.
Please could those interested let me know as soon as possible and I will
let you have further details.
Dear Tree Society member,
This is to remind you that Tom Muller will be resuming his monthly walks
in the Botanic Gardens this month (April).
We will meet in the usual place, namely in the carpark at the Botanic
Gardens at 4.45 for 5 pm on Tuesday 7th April.
We hope that entry will be free as it traditionally used to be, but do
bring some money just in case there is a problem in arranging it this
time.
Tom’s subject will be the Combretum family.
Mark Hyde
Chairman
MARCH 2009
344
MASHONALAND CALENDAR
Sunday March 15 2009
Rolf Chenaux Repond has kindly agreed to host our outing this month at
his beautiful property, 32 Trafalgar Ave Sentosa, which we last visited
on 26 November 2005.
Directions: Take Quendon Road. Go past the Italian Club and turn right
immediately before the ugly flats into Ridgeview Drive. Continue to the
end of Ridgeview and turn left at the T junction into Westminster Road.
Take the first left into Trafalgar Avenue. The house number is 32, and
there is a huge clump of bamboo at the gate. We will meet as usual at
9.30 am.
We will meet as usual at 9.30 am. Please bring a chair and a packed lunch.
»»»
MATABELELAND CALENDAR
Please contact Jean Wiley or Gill Short for details of the next Matabeleland
function.
»»»
NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
Notice is hereby given that the 59th Annual General Meeting of the Tree
Society of Zimbabwe will be held on Sunday, 17 May 2009 at 9.30 am. The
venue is still to be confirmed and will be announced in a later Tree Life.
Any proposals/resolutions and nominations for office bearers should be
forwarded to PO Box A723, Avondale, Harare by Monday 11 May if possible,
although proposals and nominations will be accepted from the floor.
AGENDA
1. Notice convening the meeting
2. Apologies
3. Minutes of the 58th A.G.M.
4. Matters Arising
5. Chairman's Report
6. Treasurer's Report
7. Election of Committee Members
8. Any Other Business
»»»
SUBSCRIPTIONS: A REMINDER
The subscription for the 12 months beginning 1 April 2009 will be US$5,
which must be paid in cash.
The subscription will be the same whether or not a Tree Life is sent
by email or whether a hard copy is produced. However, we intend to reduce
the number of hard copies and no new applications for hard copies will
be entertained.
The subscription may be paid in the following ways:
1. At any outing;
2. To the Treasurer, Terry Fallon, at 285 Samora Machel Avenue;
3. To me, Mark Hyde, at 29 Harry Pichanick Drive, Alexandra Park;
4. To any other Committee member.
Receipts can only be issued at the time of payment if payment is made
directly to the Treasurer, who holds the receipt book, but receipts are
created in all cases and if anyone wishes to have a copy of their receipt,
please ask at time of payment or contact Terry Fallon.
»»»
GREYSTONE PARK NATURE PRESERVE
Sunday, 16 November 2008
Twelve members gathered in the carpark at Greystone Park Nature Preserve
on a bright, sunny and already warm morning in November, with a strong
hint of the heat to come. Offered the choice between walking in open country
round the dam or entering the somewhat shadier area alongside the riverine
forest, the latter course was rapidly agreed upon.
The Tree Society has used the Preserve for its Saturday afternoon outings
for many years, but I don’t think we have ever had a main outing
here before and consequently the area was new to some members.
There are various different habitats at the Preserve; on this outing we
only really looked at the riverine area and that’s the area we will
discuss in this article.
Below the dam wall is an extensive area of thick shady riverine forest.
Water flows constantly even in the dry season, presumably from overflow
or leaks from the dam, and this flow results in a very interesting moist
environment with evergreen trees and shrubs, ferns and other shade-loving
species.
A further, very potent, influence is that the valley in which the Preserve
lies is quite narrow and is surrounded closely by gardens, thus allowing
many exotic species to extend themselves into the Preserve.
Just to add to the complications, a number of species have also been planted.
The mixture of the exotic, the truly native and the planted makes for
some challenging identification problems in which nothing can be taken
for granted.
The main native trees in the riverine forest are:
Celtis africana (White stinkwood)
Combretum erythrophyllum (River combretum)
Ficus sur (Cape fig)
Morella serrata (Lance-leaved waxberry). This is a rather local species,
but is certainly abundant here.
Rhamnus prinoides (Shiny leaf)
Syzygium cordatum (Waterberry)
In addition, there are a significant component of exotics:
Acrocarpus fraxinifolius (Kenya coffee shade tree)
Fraxinus cf. americanus (American ash)
Homalanthus populifolius (Queensland poplar)
Jacaranda mimosifolia (Jacaranda)
Ligustrum lucidum (Glossy privet)
Michelia champaca (Orange magnolia)
Populus × canescens (Grey poplar)
Populus deltoides (Match poplar). A number of specimens have established
themselves at the edge of the riverine zone, presumably from some very
large planted trees nearby.
Prunus cerasoides (Himalayan flowering cherry)
Salix babylonica (Weeping willow). Some very large trees of this damp-loving
species.
Toona ciliata (Cedrela)
The Michelia, a close relative of the Magnolia, is a most unusual escape
in southern Africa. A number of trees have survived here for many years
now. Some trees were in flower and the orange flowers at the top of the
canopy could be seen from the dam wall.
This strange partly exotic / partly native forest is not unusual around
Harare in damp areas. A debate took place as to whether this invasion
of exotics was desirable or not. I am actually not particularly a purist
on this subject; certainly at Greystone, there is great diversity of species,
with no one exotic dominating. In other words, biodiversity remains high.
One new (to me) exotic species seen was the Virginia creeper, Parthenocissus
quinquefolia, climbing amongst the riverine vegetation.
All in all, it was an interesting walk with interesting discussions about
the plants seen.
As an aside, a list of plant species recorded from Greystone Park may
be found on the Zimbabwe flora website at:
http://www.zimbabweflora.co.zw/speciesdata/
The site is still incomplete in many ways. Additional records would be
very welcome.
Mark Hyde
»»»
NATURAL RESOURCES LINK TO THE ECONOMY
It is sad to note how, with the situation in Zimbabwe over the last few
years, the natural resources have been so severely punished and plundered.
It was very interesting and equally sad for me to see an article I recently
read locally in Maumee, where I live, about how the economic downturn
here has resulted in an exponential growth in the number of cases resulting
from some form of plundering of natural resources. It varies from poaching
mushrooms and cutting down trees for firewood in the Oak openings region
(I wrote about it some time back) to my very own backyard. The article
below involves a trophy-size deer that regularly fed on the pear tree
in our backyard. It shows that even though we are far apart, we face similar
things. I guess the difference is that here they get caught - Occasionally!
Article: Two Toledo men have been charged with a laundry-list of violations
in four area municipal courts in connection with the poaching last month
of a well-recognized white-tailed deer in Side Cut Metropark.
The deer—a large-antlered, 15-point buck known to some Side Cut
fans as Big Boy and to others as Stickers—was probably killed in
the early hours of October 9, according to Steve Thomson, a wildlife investigator
for Ohio Wildlife District 2. He added that a state wildlife biologist
aged the deer at 8 1/2 to 9 1/2 years old—very old for a deer. "Few
deer make it to 4 1/2, let alone 8 1/2 or more," Thomson said. "His
teeth were worn down pretty good." The buck's great antler size,
moreover, puts it in a special restitution class if the men charged in
the case are convicted.
Trophy-size bucks command the highest figures, largely because of the
eager market for huge sets of antlers, Thomson said. "Any [commercial]
propagator could sell such antlers [from a captive-raised buck] for $10,000,"
the investigator said.
[The above contribution comes from Paul Nel, an overseas member of the
Society who now lives in the US – in Maumee, Ohio.]
»»»
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
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