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Monday Morning Photo - Wisteria Time in Andalucia

How quickly spring comes around after the short winter here in the Sierra Sur de Jaén. After lots of very much needed rain we´re back to the normal cloudless blue.  My garden is shooting incredbily with the moisture and now sunshine. And my beautiful wisteria flowers grandly albeit it short-lived. The big black carpenter bees love it. Each flowering season reminds me of the Botanical Gardens in Malaga and the ´tunnel´ of wisteria that I haven´t yet caught in bloom. April is a good time to plan to go if it´s on your list.  Here´s the botanical garden link La Concepción Botanical Gardens. And a sneaky peak at the wisteria. See the Monday Morning Photos list.

Granada means Pomegranate


It's that time of year when the pomegranates have just about finished, the trees have lost their leaves and all the colour is on the ground, but they are still decorative.

Drying Pomegranate on Tree

The pomegranate is not only the symbol of Granada city but in Spanish granada means pomegranate. Look closely and you'll see this vibrant fruit all over the city in pictures and etchings. It was the Catholic Kings who first used the pomegranate as a symbol when the final stronghold of the Moors, the Alhambra Palace, fell into their hands.

Spanish Ceramic Street Plaque, Granada


Pomegranate trees are deciduous, in winter they're twiggy and boring then, those new fresh green leaves burst forth in spring, followed by beautiful orangey-red flowers which become gorgeously rich coloured fruit, first like earrings then christmas tree baubles. Even after the fruit has ripened and burst open to reveal those beautiful ruby coloured seeds, which are packed full with antioxidant properties, and they fall to the ground or relished by birds the dying, drying tough skin takes on its own beauty.

Pomegranate Open on Tree

It's said to have originated from Iran and Afghanistan and is mentioned in the bible, where there are 163 commandments of the Jewish faith relating exactly to the number of seeds in every pomegranate. I haven't counted them personally but a tour guide once told me she had checked four and they were 163 seeds in each one. I'm happy to believe that and save myself the count.

 

We have a pomegranate tree in ou garden which I'm trying to keep small, but every year it astounds me with its beauty in every season and it's abundance of decorative seasons ending in a ruby-rich harvest.




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