tihn pet farang (ตีนเป็ดผรั่ง)
Thai. ‘Foreign duck-feet’. Name for a small tree, that
grows up to 8 meters tall and originally comes from Central America,
where it is usually found in open area and flatlands.
It is a member of the trumpet-flower family Bignoniaceae and is
known by the botanical name Crescentia alata. It has a variety of
common names, including Winged Calabash, Mexican Calabash, and Morrito. In Thailand, it is often seen as an ornamental
or shade tree in
gardens and public parks, where it stands out, due to its open,
spreading growth habit and its large, drop-
(fig.)
or
cannonball-shaped,
calabash-like
fruits,
that can grow to a diameter of around ten centimeters, yellow-green
to golden-brown in colour,
and with a shell so hard it is tough to open, a necessary
requirement for the seeds inside to germinate. Hence, unless it
breaks open upon hitting a hard surface when falling from the
branch, or opened by human intervention, the seeds cannot disperse.
The ‒often slanted and twisted‒ trunk has a
dark brown to gray bark, with deep fissures, and some leaves,
fruits, purplish flowers and buts (fig.),
sprout directly from it.
The tree has bright green leaves, that grow to about 12 centimeters
long and have three leaflets. They
are oblong or lance-shaped and attach to the
main
stem, some even
directly on the trunk (fig.),
by means of a winged petiole, which gives the tree the second part
of its botanical name, i.e. alata, which means ‘winged’. Hence, they
appear somewhat cross-shaped, a feature that fascinated the early
European conquistadores, who took the unusual appearance of the
cross-shaped foliage as a sign that a higher power approved of their
efforts to conquer the Americas. The tree tolerates both dry and moist
conditions and prefers sites where it receives lots of sun. The pulp
from the fruit is used in herbal medicine as a laxative and to treat
bronchitis, and in Mexico the dried fruits are made into bowls and
musical instruments.
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