Death and Life Monkeypod Blossom
by Gary F Richards
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Title
Death and Life Monkeypod Blossom
Artist
Gary F Richards
Medium
Photograph - Photograph
Description
5th Top Finish in the contest… INTENT TO CONVEY HIDDEN MESSAGES CONTEST, 07/29/2023, Members Participating: 124, Images Submitted: 484
1st Place Win in the contest YOUR CLEAREST PHOTOS, 06/23/2022, Members Participating: 282, Images Submitted: 793
This is a monkeypod tree blossom which has fallen onto a cooled lava flow. It signifies the rebirth of life after the death and destruction of a lava flow. Lava brings fresh minerals up to the surface creating new soil. I photographed this blossom on the Big Island of Hawaii.
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Copyrighted in 2021 by Gary F Richards. All rights reserved.
Monkeypod Tree, curtesy of Bike Maui
Called saman in Spanish and “raintree” around the globe, the monkeypod tree arrived in “The Sandwich Islands” in 1847, when Peter A. Brinsmade of Ladd & Company—one of the first sugar plantations on the islands—introduced two seeds from Panama to the volcanic soil. The first seed was planted at the crossroad of Bishop and Hotel Streets in downtown Honolulu, Oahu; the second in the historic district of Koloa on Kauai. Today, those kernels are believed to be the progenitors for the hundreds of monkeypod trees currently found throughout Hawaii.
And for good reason: The seeds swiftly took to the Aloha State’s diverse climate, particularly in savannahs, wherein the trees grow can grow up to 80 feet. With gorgeous umbrellas of thick foliage and short but sturdy trunks, the monkeypod has become synonymous with the islands’ organic beauty—particularly on Oahu, where the island’s largest monkeypod tree spawned a canopy that traverses nearly an acre.
Uploaded
August 20th, 2021
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Comments (159)
AnnaJo Vahle 6 Days Ago
Nice description to this beautiful photograph, Gary. I like your commentary. f
Nancy Griswold
Fascinating floral capture Gary, I have never seen anything like this, what an amazing flower! f/l