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The Elements of Typographic Style

Patagonia Synchilla Snap-T Pullover

Minding the Earth, Mending the Word: Zen and the Art of Planetary Crisis

North Face Base Camp Duffel (Medium)

 

 

 

Entries in rubber (2)

Wednesday
Feb242010

Diversifikasi

"Diversify your farming by planting coffee between your rubber trees".  Love this poster.  I wasn't able to convince the Department of Agriculture official in Pontianak to take it off the wall and give it to me, but he did let me take this photo. [NOTE: The only place I ever saw someone planting coffee between rubber plants was in Dayak tembawang (see Tembawang), and I'm pretty sure that this was not being done at the request of the Department of Agriculture]  

Saturday
Feb282009

Rubber

Hevea braziliensis, the source of Pará rubber, is one of the most ubiquitous trees in almost every place I have worked. It grows wild in the flooded forests of Peru where I was studying native fruits (see Regeneration Surveys, and Grias Predated), and was also quite common in the Dayak tembawangs of West Kalimantan (see Tembawang). Tapping the latex from these trees, whether cultivated or wild, provides an important source of income for rural populations throughout the tropics. [NOTE: The historical information about Pará rubber in the Wikipedia link is (embarrassingly) incorrect. Better to find a copy of J.W. Purseglove's Tropical Crops: Dicotyledons (ISBN 9780470702512) and read his thorough and extensive treatment of this important economic tree.]