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An index of previous issues can be found here....... This email covers a number of issues and I would be grateful if you could give some thought to the various points: 1. Notice of the Annual General Meeting of the Tree Society Notice is hereby given that the 60th Annual General Meeting of the Tree Society of Zimbabwe will be held at 7a Belfast Close, Emerald Hill, Harare on Sunday 16th May 2010 at 9.30 am. Any proposals/resolutions and nominations for office bearers (and any
volunteers to be on the Committee) should be forwarded to P O Box A 723
Avondale, Harare (or sent by email to the secretary Ruth Evans at We are most grateful to Bill Kinsey and Lyn Read for once again hosting us in their beautiful garden. AGENDA 2. Treasurer required Terry Fallon, who has been our hardworking Treasurer for the last 6 years, has announced his intention to retire from the post. We are most grateful for all the work that he has done for the Society over a most difficult period. We now therefore have a vacancy for Treasurer and I am asking for volunteers. We would like to announce the new treasurer at the AGM. If anyone is interested in finding out more, please contact me for a discussion (after May 2nd as I will be away until then). 3. Reminder re Sunday's outing to Lanark This is also a reminder about the outing to Lanark Game Park this Sunday, 18th April. Unfortunately, I will be away (in Madagascar) but I am sure that it will be an interesting and enjoyable day in the capable hands of Dave Hartung. Furthermore, some additional food and drinks will be provided by David Hasluck. --- Mark Hyde March 2010 355 MASHONALAND CALENDAR By kind permission of Sarah Carter, the main outing for March will be to the Bally Vaughan Sanctuary. It must be many years since the Tree Society last visited Bally Vaughan. I personally last went there nine years ago, and we found some nice rocky and riverine vegetation, rather like that of Domboshawa and Ngomakurira. The entrance fee is $4 per person. Sarah has agreed that we can all drive right up to the restaurant area, park beyond that, do our walk and then use her verandah facility for lunch so neither chairs nor tables would have to be brought. There is a snack menu available if anyone would like to use their kitchen (burger $3); otherwise bring a packed lunch as usual. Directions: Take the Enterprise Road out of town to the toll gate ($1). Then turn left onto the Shamva Road and proceed 21k. On the left is the sign for Bally Vaughan. Bring small change to pay for your entrance ($4 pp). Drive right up to the restaurant and park beyond it. Please bring some water and a packed lunch. A tree introduced to Kenya to combat desertification has itself become a problem, invading farmland and damaging farmers' livelihoods. Prosopis juliflora, known as the 'devil tree' in some areas, was introduced from Latin America to semi-arid districts of Kenya by nongovernmental organisations in the 1980s. It was selected because of its ability to survive in dry environments and for its expansive root system, which helps bind soil and prevent erosion. Now P. juliflora is the target of a planned government control programme after research by Gabriel Muturi of the Kenya Forestry Research Institute (KEFRI), published in April last year, found that up to 27 million hectares of land are at risk from the plant. The study, carried out in arid Turkana district in northwest Kenya, also showed that a local species of acacia tree, Acacia tortilis, has declined by over 40 per cent in some areas possibly because P. juliflora is displacing it. Farmers in the Baringo district of Kenya's Rift Valley province have sued the government for millions of Kenyan shillings for loss of grazing fields and arable land caused by the alien tree's invasion. The farmers say they have lost animals, which died because they were unable to eat when their teeth fell out after feeding on the shrub. "The government is working round the clock to come up with a policy on management of the species," said Raphael Mworia, spokesperson for the Kenya Forestry Service (KFS). "A policy paper detailing where it can be planted, when and in what numbers is being worked on and soon the government will be able to release the guidelines to the public," added Mworia. Meanwhile the KFS is training farmers on how to live with the shrub, by using its pods for fodder and stems for firewood timber and charcoal. "Pastoralists must now start making use of the benefits that come with the species instead of looking at the negative aspects of it all the time," said Mworia. Mworia added that increased use of P. juliflora for charcoal would save the over-exploited acacia species from being used for this purpose. [Adapted from the original by Maina Waruru and posted on http://www.scidev.net/en/sub-saharan-africa/news/
in November 2009]
Margaret Patton Jamieson was born on 2 July 1924 in the little town of what was then called Potgietersrus, in the South African Transvaal. She was the younger daughter of Andrew Patton Jamieson, a Scottish emigrant, and Charlotte Harding, one of the many Hardings who hailed from the town of Harding in Natal. Her siblings were a sister, Joan, and brother, Phillip. She had 22 first cousins. Tiring of the droughts and farming problems around Pietersburg, the Jamieson family packed their few possessions into a Ford motorcar and drove up to Southern Rhodesia. They initially farmed near Bindura but soon looked for a cooler, wetter climate, and eventually settled at Theydon, near Marondera. Their farm was called Dunsappie, named after a small loch in Edinburgh, her father’s home town. As with so many of the early farmers, they survived good and bad years: crop failures, drought, locust plagues, and crop-raiding baboons. As her elder sister and brother were sent off to boarding school, Margaret (Meg to family and friends) was frequently alone and she used to tell of her long walks and explorations of the many kopjes on the farm, always in the company of her faithful dogs. Meg was educated at Marandellas High and later at Girls’ High School in Salisbury. She was awarded a Junior Beit Scholarship, which enabled her to sit her Matric examinations, where she excelled in geography and botany. The Second World War intervened and with the death of her brother Pip in 1944, she was forced to give up any idea of university and earn her living. Her first job was with the Treasury Department, where she earned the enormous sum of £11 per month. She and Joan and two other friends shared a small flat, and their only transport was bicycles. In 1954, she married Lieutenant (later Major) Edgar Davey Childes in what was quite a society wedding. There were over 300 guests including the Prime Minister. Meg refused to have her children grow up in a flat in surburbia so she and her husband took out a (very) long-term loan and bought 14 acres of land in Quinnington, Borrowdale. Their friends thought they were mad living right out “in the sticks” where the only access was a dusty/muddy quagmire of a road. But Meg could indulge her farming instincts, and she developed a huge vegetable garden and fruit orchard as well as a wide variety of flowers and interesting plants, such as aloes and cycads. Being a keen botanist, she knew the Latin names of many plants, and passed these on to her children, along with the enjoyment of long evening walks accompanied by the dogs and an appreciation of wild life. In addition to being a keen gardener, Meg also spent hours making marmalades, jams, chutneys and other preserves. For several years in the 1970s she ran a small hardware business in Chisipite, and eventually moved back into public service in 1976. She initially worked in the Registry at Research and Specialist Services, and later transferred to Police Headquarters, where she became the Registry Supervisor – a position of great responsibility. After retiring from government in the early 1980s, Meg then worked for an estate agent until she finally retired in 1994. She still kept very busy and worked hard for several committees: the Aloe and Cycad Society, the Harare Garden Club, the Rose Society and the SPCA. She was a very ardent and interested supporter of the Tree Society. Her knowledge of plants, her love of animals and her willingness to help
others have been an inspiration to her family and friends. COMMITTEE MEMBERS’ Tree Life Editor Home 302812 The Tree Society’s e-mail address is The Tree Society web site is Previous issues from 1992 to present date can be viewed by clicking here ..... Aims and Objectives - Monthly Outings - Other Activities - History - Newsletters - How to Join - Contact Us - Links - Home | |||