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Volume 6, December 2004 |
ISSN 1538-893X |
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An Intrepid Tour of Belize’s Wild Gardens
By Jan
Landin,
Yawanago |
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A
lovely way to spend a few hours is to take a walk through the botanical gardens
and orchards at DuPlooy’s, located east and north of the Macal River. The
DuPlooy family has planted over 2,000 trees and a large assortment of plants,
and has an orchid house and pond on the property.
Many resident birds grace the estate. The DuPlooys have an especially
nice array of tropical fruit trees, and I experienced my first sight of lychee
nuts and citron fruit growing when I was there recently. Less
than eight miles from San Ignacio, and also on the Macal River, is Ix Chel Farm.
You can take a wonderful walk there on The Rainforest Medicine Trail, once known
as the Panti Trail. Ix Chel is the Mayan goddess of the moon and wife of the
sun. She is the patroness of weaving, childbirth, and most important in this
case, the patroness of medicine. There is a research center at the farm that
actively seeks remedies from indigenous plants for curing cancer, AIDS and other
afflictions. A
walk along the medicinal plant trail reveals a wealth of knowledge in a very
compact space. You can learn about the Doctrine of Signature the bush doctors
use to help them decide which plant cures to use. The Doctrine of Signature,
though rejected by modern botanists, was first observed by Paracelsus in ancient
times and still has many herbalist followers. The belief is that medicinal
plants give a physical sign, which indicates what they will cure. For instance,
a wild yam has a knotty and gnarled root, which indicates its use for arthritis,
while its heart-shaped leaf and the yam’s shape itself indicate its use in
blood tonics. You
may get to see the black orchid, which is the national flower of Belize, or
tropical products we use everyday, like pineapple, banana, coffee and cashews.
The names of some of the other plants and trees may captivate you: give and take
palm, red gumbolimbo, chico zapote, tie tie or ki bix.
The trees at Cahal Pech
The
ruins of Cahal Pech, which is even closer to San Ignacio, is located on top of
Cahal Pech Hill in San Ignacio. Reconstructive work has been going on at the
site since the late 1980s. Looting was a big problem before that time. Experts
think it was a ceremonial and administrative center from 900 B.C. to 800 A.D.
On this property you will
find many varieties of trees. One especially nice chico zapote sits on the edge
of Plaza A. I have seen a pair of keel billed toucans there, clacking their
enormous bills together at the fortune of finding a ripe fruit. Zapote, or
sometimes sapote or also called Sapodilla, produces a fruit meant for the gods
though its fruit is rather small and covered with an ugly brown skin. The flesh
is very compact and not the prettiest color either, but the taste is rich and
satisfying, like buttery brown sugar packed into a fruit shell. It
is also known for the resin or chicle. The resin was collected furiously
in the past for chewing gum until a synthetic form was developed. The wood of
the tree is well known for its durability and it’s use for carving. It was
used by the Maya to build lintels in their structures and some still can be
found holding up doorways. In
some cases, those lintels are all that is left, having outlasted most of the
stone walls surrounding them. The site contains 34 structures and a rather new
museum opened around 1998. I returned many years later to this site after
hearing a museum would be built; now, I can say gratefully, it’s there. The
Ruins of Xunantunich, located only seven miles from San Ignacio and near the
village of San Jose Succotz, can provide a memorable view of the many cohune
palm trees located there. A hand-drawn ferry will take you across the Mopan
River to reach the ruins, which are perched on top of a hill. As you climb the
hill, you’ll pass under the cohunes’ grand fronds. Due to their deep, dark,
green color, they have a rather mysterious appearance. I once heard that if you
wanted to discover your own ruin you should look for a large group of cohune
palms. The
Maya were very dependent on the oil they pressed from the palm nuts. The oil was
used for cooking, skin, hair, healing and fuel for lamps. The nuts left whole
were used to make charcoal and the husks burned for fuel. The meat can be eaten
but it contains 40% fat, which is still rendered today for cooking oil and other
uses. The heart of the palm is still eaten as a delicacy, especially at
holidays. The
name Xunantunich means iron maiden and El Castillo is its most prominent
structure. El Castillo is 130 feet high and held the record as the tallest
structure in Belize for many years. From a room at the top of the roof comb you
can see into Guatemala. Beautiful masks surround the structure and a lot of
reconstruction in recent years has helped make the masks more visible. Mountain
Pine Ridge Forest Reserve
Is
south
of San Ignacio. It covers
over
300 square miles of tropical pine forest, bordered by the Maya Mountains to the
south. The Rio On flows through the area, providing caves and pools to explore.
Some pools even have their own natural water slides. A highlight is
1,000-foot-high waterfall, spectacular in the rainy season. As
you leave town, the Cristo Ray road winds along the Macal river, where you might
glimpse some great views of the enormous bromeliads and epiphytes growing on the
trees near the river. One variety, which undulates over and under the great arms
of the trees, is called “devil’s guts” by the locals. As you approach the
reserve, you may find yourself scratching your head a bit to see pine trees,
mahogany and palm trees all growing together. If you are fortunate enough to see
some of it’s resident macaws, you may become even more enchanted. The
Chiquibul Road, which winds through the reserve, will eventually take you to the
ruins of Caracol. The road is unpaved and access to Caracol becomes next to
impossible when it rains. The
Ruins of Caracol is in the Chiquibul National Forest within the boundaries of
Caracol Natural Monument Reservation, about 53 miles south of San Ignacio. When
I arrived there last, I was surprised to see a profusion of red impatiens
growing from the roofs of most of the thatched roof out-buildings. It seems that
one of the archaeological workers brought them there to beautify her quarters
and the birds helped them to proliferate over a vast area. A nice spot to view
plants and wildlife is the reservoir. Water plants dominate the area and provide
a wonderland for waterfowl and small mammals. My
favorite plant at the site could involve bird propagation, as well. It is a tree
with very small peppers growing on it, near the main complex. I believe
archeologists would call it a chiltepin. It could be thousands of years old. The
plant may have been cultivated by ancient residents at the site. Before I saw
it, I hadn’t really thought about peppers growing on trees before. The
Sky Palace at Caracol, when discovered to be at 138 feet in height, eclipsed El
Castillo at Xunantunich and broke its longstanding record of being the tallest
structure by eight feet. Caracol is well known for its defeat by Lord Water of
Tikal and the later defeat of Naranjo which secured Caracol’s dominance in the
region until late in the 7th century A.D. The population here at its peak is
estimated to have been at around 150,000. Wild or cultivated, Belize’s gardens are always wonderful. Their biological diversity will exceed your expectations, and you will understand why the country has become a world-class, cultural adventure destination.
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