Showcase Sunday: Nature's beauty, medicine and poison!

avatar

One more Sunday is here as well as one more post with the #showcasesunday tag, an idea of @nonameslefttouse meant to revive old posts. I wrote this one in the fall of 2018 and I really feel it deserves a little more attention.

So, here we go, hope you like it!

The other day I was walking with my dog on the mountain, just above the village I live, when I noticed a plethora of beautiful white flowers. I was familiar with the plant but I have never saw a spectacle like this! So I started my little research :)

_MG_8174.jpg

It's scientific name is "Urginea maritima" but it has many common names.

Drimia maritima (syn. Urginea maritima) is a species of flowering plant in the family Asparagaceae, subfamily Scilloideae (formerly the family Hyacinthaceae).[2] This species is known by several common names, including squill, sea squill, sea onion,[3] and maritime squill.[4] It may also be called red squill, particularly a form which produces red-tinged flowers instead of white.[4] It is native to southern Europe, western Asia, and northern Africa.[3]
wikipedia

_MG_8189.jpg

_MG_8274.jpg

In Crete we call it "askeletoura" but I have found 9 different Greek names for this miraculous plant! The reason that I haven't noticed it the past 5 years that I am living here, is because it doesn't blossom every year nor in the same way! As a matter of fact the farmers used to observe it, in order to predict the weather! The excessive amount of flowers that I have seen, is supposed to signify a lot of rain in the winter. I cross my fingers it really does since the past 3 years the rain here was minimum and eastern Crete is getting into a critical stage of drought.

_MG_8148.jpg

_MG_8197.jpg

_MG_8170.jpg

It is an amazing plant that flourishes out of the dry land with absolute lack of water. In fact if you water it, it won't blossom! In the popular tradition it is a good luck charm that people used to hung on their door on new-year's eve.

_MG_8294.jpg

It is also a very powerful medicine and poison that is known from the ancient years. It is mentioned in one of the oldest Egyptian medical texts dating in the 16th century bc. The ancient Greeks where using it to treat icterus, asthma and spasms. In order to take advantage of its diuretic, expectorant and laxative properties they were making a solution with vinegar while they were using the skin of the bulb to treat heart disorders.

_MG_8292.jpg

Some of the elderly are recalling using the stick of the plant, crushed and mixed with honey, to treat hard skin on feet and the bulb crushed and mixed with olive oil to treat sciatica (nerve pain in hip and leg). In both cases the mixture was used externally. It was also used to treat bronchitis and pulmonary disorders but no one could remember how. They warned me though, to be very careful with the bulb since they were using it as rat poison!

_MG_8139.jpg

_MG_8238.jpg

Nowadays there are companies that use it as a healing agent at their products (soap, shampoo and lotion) against hair loss, acne and pimple. I am afraid, though, that all the old and ancient recipes for this remarkable natural medicine are gone forever.

_MG_8220.jpg

If you are familiar with that plant and you are using it in your country, please let me know in the comments, below.

_MG_8297.jpg

I don't know if you have read the whole text or you just looked at the pictures but if you did you might find also interesting the update that I wrote 5 months later to confirm that indeed, as the flower predicted, the following months the rainfall in Crete was the largest for decades and we even experienced the unpleasant record of torrential rainfall and flooding!

Deserves to be called the weather plant, isn't it?

_MG_8163.jpg

The last picture is also my entry for the Deranged Photography Contest hosted by @derangedvisions. This week's theme is "Fill the Frame" and this is a filled frame indeed!

All the pictures and the words are mine.

Thank you for reading and if you want to know more about me you can check out my introduction post.
Commenting, upvoting and resteeming are highly appreciated!



0
0
0.000
17 comments
avatar

@tipu curate

0
0
0.000
avatar

Hi @worldfinances

How have you been? It seem that we're both playing Holybread. What's your impression so far?

I play as @project.hope and so far I found this game quite entertaining. Perhaps it will get boring soon, but right now it's still loads of fun :)

Yours,
Piotr

0
0
0.000
avatar

This post has been manually curated by The PhotoStream team: The Photography Tribe!

banner 1.jpg

Congratulations @fotostef

0
0
0.000
avatar

Great macro shots. I think I'd have led with the bee and/or the moth, myself though. Those shots are amazing.

0
0
0.000
avatar

lovely flower, I enjoyed reading and some of these 'portrait of a flower in the landscape' look very solid. especially I appreciated the macros with bee and butterfly.
!BEER

ps. is this 'fit the frame' contest weekly? I rather supposed that it was a daily topic/prompt (each day different, but pics can be added for all the next week)?

0
0
0.000
avatar

Thanks a lot @qwerrie!
Yes it is a weekly contest, I think this theme will be open for a couple more days.

0
0
0.000