Sunday, 20 October 2013

WATER LILY



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                               WATER LILY


              Scientific Name ¦-  Nymphaea rubra Roxb.



              Family               ¦-  Nymphaeaceae



            Vernacular Names  



            English     ¦-   Water lily



            Malayalam ¦-   Aambal



            Hindi         ¦-  Chhota kamal



           Sanskrit      ¦-  Aruna kamala.



           Bengali       ¦–  Rakta kamal



           Tamil          ¦–  Allitamarai



           Telugu        ¦–  Allitamara



           Distribution and Habitat ¦-  Common throughout India in the warmer parts.



           Parts Used                      ¦-  Root stalk, flower.



           Properties                      ¦-  Stomachic, antidiarrhoeal.



Uses ¦-  Flower is used in removing impurities from the blood, thirst, and cough and vomiting. Powdered rootstock is used in dyspepsia, diarrhoea, piles.



Botany ¦-  Aquatic herbs. Root stock tuberous, short, erect, and roundish. Leaves peltate, 15-25 cm diameter, sharply toothed, downy but not spotted beneath. Lobes diverging; connectivum not prolonged. Petioles very long, cylindric, submerged, glabrous or puberulous, inserted 12-18 mm within very near the margin of the leaf. Flowers, solitary,7.5-20 cm across, deep red, pale rose or white, open in the mornings only; peduncles very long, usually pubescent; torus bottle shaped. Sepals 4, oblong, obtuse, 5-10 ribbed. Petals numerous, about 12, oblong, obtuse, about thrice as long as broad. Stamens about 40; anthers without appendages; filaments much dilated at the base; pollen smooth. Stigma 10-20, rayed, with clavate appendages. Fruits 3 cm diam, fleshy, globose, green, ripening beneath the water. Seeds ovoid, rough, aril white, transparent.
                                                                                                                           Varnam4u.blog spot.com








Saturday, 14 September 2013

ARAYAL

ARAYAL ( അരയാൽ






                                

Scientific Name ¦-  Ficus religiosa Linn.



Family ¦-  Moraceae



Vernacular Names ¦ 



        English ¦-  Sacred fig, Peepal tree



        Malayalam ¦-  Arayal



        Hindi ¦-  Pippal



        Sanskrit ¦-  Asvatthah, Pippalah



        Bengali ¦  Asvatha



        Gujarat ¦  Jari



        Kannada ¦  Aswatha



        Punjabi ¦  Pipal



        Tamil ¦  Arasu



        Telungu ¦  Ravi



Distribution and Habitat ¦-  It is common throughout India, often planted in the vicinity of the temples.



Chemical Constituents ¦-  Bark gives beta-sitosterol and its D-glucoside,. Stem bark contain vitamin K, stigmasterol, phytosterolin and 4% of tannin. Leaves have protein and amino acids.



Parts Used ¦-  Stem bark, Leaves and young shoots, flower, Fruits and Latex



Properties ¦-  Bark is hypoglycaemic, antidermatic, antiinflammatory. Stem bark is antiprotozoal, anthelmintic and antiviral. Bark is astringent, antigonorrheic, febrifuge, aphrodisiac and antidysenteric. Syconium, leaf and young shoot are purgative. Fruits are laxative and digestive. Seeds are refrigerant and laxative.



Uses ¦-  It is used in the treatment of gonorrhoea, diarrhoea, dysentery, haemorrhoids and gastrohelcosis. A paste of the powdered bark is a good absorbent for inflammatory swellings. It is also good for burns. Leaves and tender shoots have purgative properties and are also recommended for wounds and skin diseases. The dried fruit pulverized and taken in water cures asthma. The latex is good for neuralgia, inflammations and haemorrhages



Formulations ¦-  Nalpamaradi taila, Saribadyasava, Candanasava, Karnasulantaka, Valiyamarma gulika etc



Botany ¦-  Peepel tree or sacred fig is a large deciduous tree with few or no aerial roots, frequently epiphytal. Leaves leathery, broadly ovate, entire, undulate, tip narrowed into a linear, tail like point, petiolate, petiole 7.5-10 cm long. Male flowers few, only near the mouth of the some receptacles, sessile. Gall and fertile flowers sessile or pedicellate, the gall flowers much more numerous than the fertile females and many of with out perianth. Figs axillary, sessile, in pairs, globose, slightly vertically flattened, 12 mm in diameter, dark purple when ripe.



Agro Techonology ¦ 



        Soil and Climate ¦  Deep, alluvial sandy loam with good drainage. The annual rainfall requirement for this species is 500 mm to 5000 mm during the monsoon season. The maximum temperature is 46ºC, while the minimum seldom goes below freezing point.



        Propagation ¦  seeds, stump or branch cuttings and wildlings



        Sowing ¦  Ripe fruits are collected, rubbed and washed to get clean seed which is dried under sun before fresh sowing or storage. Seed is dibbed in poly bags or broadcasted on seed beds either in March-April or June-July and lightly covered with thin soil.



        Transplanting ¦  Rooted cuttings are to be transplanted to prepared pits.



        Manure ¦  No regular manuring is required. Irrigation is not a must as a plant is hardy.



        Irrigations ¦  Irrigation is done at regular intervals.



        Plant protection ¦  The plant is not attacked by any serious pests or diseases.


                                                       varnam4u.blogspot.com

Monday, 9 September 2013

Sunday, 25 August 2013

Vazhvanthol Water Falls Bonacadu.

                     Water falls in Vazhvanthol Bonacadu










                               
                                Natural Beauty in Trivandrum Kerala.