No dogs but three dragons in the land of the spaghetti western


Forget the dogs now it's all about dragons. Most of them have been slain but like Jurassic Park they rise again, like this Gran Canaria Dragon (Tree). Thankfully these dragons grow easily from seed.

There are half a dozen different kinds of Dragon Tree, mostly in Africa and nearby islands but also one in Central America. There are more species of Dracaena, about 40 it seems, but (with Plato's Socrates in my head) all Dragon Trees are Dracaena but not all Dracaena are Dragon Trees.

Sydney's Royal Botanic Garden had one of the oldest (over 100 years) and beautifully symmetrical Dragon Trees in cultivation. I've posted pictures of it upright and now leaning - still old and beautiful but less symmetrical.

Jardín Botánico Viera y Clavijo in Gran Canaria, an island where Dragon Trees grow wild (just), has some lovely specimens but none quite matching the one in Sydney. Still for a 60-year old botanic garden they are well on their way.




What this botanic gardens has that Sydney does not (again I'm sounding like a Socratic logician) is two other dragon trees: Dracaena tamaranae (Gran Canaria Dragon Tree; illustrated at top of post), a species that only grows on this island (and which I apparently drove past, at some distance and out of view, yesterday) and Dracaena cinnabari (Arabian Dragon Tree) the most common source of the 'blood' (produced in response to fungi when the stem is damaged) used in medicine.  




We did see a Gran Canaria Dragon Tree outside the botanic garden but that was in this town square in Tejeda, high in the mountains of central Gran Canaria. So high, in fact, that we meet the southerly end of the the mar de nubes (sea of clouds). A few kilometres northward it was more nubes than nature, and it was time to descend to the coast again.




On the way to Tejeda, and before the mist rolled in, we were reminded why spaghetti westerns were shot on this island, something I mentioned in passing a year or so ago not knowing I would ever be here dragon hunting. Not a dragon in sight here, but perhaps behind one of the rocks, Clint Eastwood?










Comments

Unknown said…
I find those trees both fascinating and gorgeous! I'd love to grow some from seed but it would take an eternity.
Talking Plants said…
Yes very slow but perhaps a nice gift to the next generation (or two...)!
Talking Plants said…
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