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here....... MASHONALAND CALENDAR Saturday, September 25th: Domboshawa Directions: Take the Borrowdale Road out of Harare and continue for ±33km
into the Chinhamora Communal Land. Turn right at the Domboshawa Cave sign
and continue to the car park. Eleven members of the Society made the trip out to Gosho Park on a sunny, cool, but pleasant day in August. The history of Gosho is that in 1984 Peter Ginn, the well-known bird photographer and geography teacher at Peterhouse, approached the United Bottling Company, Mr Daryl Mitchell from Rakodzi farm and several others, and a fence was erected. Later, a pond was built and some game was introduced. The area is currently used by the Peterhouse group of schools for conservation purposes. It was named after Mr Patrick Gosho, a former Estate Manager at Springvale House. The vegetation is primarily miombo woodland, msasa and mnondo being major components. Many areas have a rocky flora and Brachystegia tamarindoides occurs from time to time. The altitude where we started walking was 1,640m (5,380ft) and by the end of our morning walk was 1,670m (5,480ft), i.e. quite a high altitude. Rainfall is high and there are frequent mists, which provide some moisture during the dry season. Most trees are festooned with lichens. In addition to the woodland, there are also areas of vlei and grassland. The last time that the Tree Society visited Gosho was 17 September 2000, nearly 10 years ago. We were one month earlier than in 2000, and as we have noted around Harare the distinctively coloured leaves of the msasas seem to be quite late this year. On the many Tree Society trips which we did over the Heroes’ weekend (c. 11th and 12th August), we often saw splendid trees in full leaf. However, not this year. We did see one tree by the road between Harare and Marondera, but at Gosho Park all the msasas still had their old leaves. We parked in the same spot as in 2000 and walked out into an open grassy area. There we found a small and, in my experience, unusual species of Euphorbia in flower. It is a small perennial with linear, almost ericoid, leaves named E. cyparissioides. Examination of the 2000 records shows that we found it in exactly the same spot 10 years earlier. Basically it was too early in the year for the spring flowers, but we did surprisingly well as most trees still retained their leaves and we were able to name most of the trees we saw. One of the few species in new, very green leaf and flower was Searsia (Rhus) longipes, which seemed to be very common in the understorey. Also very common was the Bladder-nut, Diospyros whyteana. This high-rainfall species does not generally occur close to Harare (although we have one record of it from near Makumbi Mission in the Chinhamora Communal Land); you have to go eastwards along the watershed before it appears. I was surprised how common it was in the understorey and how shiny the leaves were. The name refers to the calyx, which is accrescent, that is it enlarges in fruit to form a bladder-like structure enclosing the seed. After a time we came across some bushes with the remains of the red bladders, but all the bladders had been opened and the seed removed. Also just coming into flower was Eriosema ellipticum. This is a true shrub, not a suffrutex as was the Eriosema englerianum we had seen in grassland earlier. It is a yellow-flowered legume with simple leaves and again tends to be a sign of higher rainfall areas – although this one is quite common around Harare – e.g. at Cleveland Dam. We stopped and looked at a specimen of Gymnosporia senegalensis (Confetti tree). This still bore some white flowers, but it is quite late in the year for this winter-flowering species. Typical were the greyish obovate leaves with red petioles. Everywhere in rocky places and even in places which did not look particularly rocky was Maytenus undata (Koko tree). We were able to fold the leaves and see the typical greyish line appear and also to smell the distinctive kitchen-cupboard-plastic odour. At this point, we approached the base of a granite kopje with large piled up boulders. At the base was another special plant which we often see in the Marondera area, namely Apodytes dimidiata, the White pear. This has shiny simple alternate leaves and can be very puzzling if no flowers or fruits are present to give one a clue – as was the case here. This is another species which prefers high rainfall areas. Some of us climbed the rocky hill. It was very grassy, and it appeared that fire had managed to get into it, limiting the extent of the woody vegetation. Here was Olinia vanguerioides (Zimbabwe hard-pear), a shrub or small tree with opposite rather Rubiaceae-like leaves as the specific name (Vangueria-like) suggests. Also present amongst the rocks was Ficus natalensis subsp. graniticola, with its relatively small obovate dark green leaves which are often truncate at the apex. A small tree was found covered in fruits. Another species among the rocks was Sericanthe andongensis (Venda coffee). A little bit later in the year, this will be producing its distinctive white flowers, which we saw last year in November when we visited Ruzawi. However at this stage there were leaves and flower buds only. It is another Rubiaceae with opposite leaves and interpetiolar stipules. A very common tree which we saw in many places was Cussonia natalensis (the Simple-leaved cabbage-tree). Generally it preferred rocky areas. The leaves go a bright yellow in winter, but most of the trees here had shed these leaves, and the spike-like inflorescences were just coming into flower. We have puzzled before over the habitat requirements of this species. It is certainly a species of high altitude and high rainfall as its presence here and along the main road from about Bromley eastwards suggests. However, it also occurs in much drier locations at much lower altitudes as well. Later we saw a single Cussonia spicata in the miombo woodland. This species at least is fairly clear in its high altitude and high rainfall requirements. We did not see the third Zimbabwean Cussonia, namely C. arborea, but I understand that it does also occur at Gosho. After a time we arrived at another camp with ablution facilities, and next to it was an extraordinary towering rock. I thought it might be used for abseiling but I could see no way, without some extraordinary mountaineering skills, that anyone could actually climb to the top. On our way back for lunch, we came across a colony of Searsia (Rhus) kirkii plants in fruit. This is a suffrutex Searsia which never becomes a tree. The fruits were a reddish-orange colour and quite distinctive. Several photographers immediately clustered round it. After lunch we did a walk going down the stream system, which contains three small dams. In this part of the woodland there was little or no Diospyros whyteana, but the msasa trees were well laden with epiphytic orchids. A fairly tame herd of impala was seen. Nothing much new was added, but we did come across a colony of small Myrsine africana plants, a species which was new to some of the group. Examination under a lens showed the translucent orange-brown glands in the lamina of the leaf.
Mark Hyde Here are a few of the less weird ones. In Europe Acorns
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