/

GlobalView
  • Change Site
  • GlobalView
  • Nelson Mandela University
  • NMU Archives and Exhibition Centre
  • Rhodes University
  • Rhodes University Cory
  • Rhodes University ILAM
  • Rhodes University SAIAB
  • University of Fort Hare
  • Walter Sisulu University
  • Advanced Search
  • Expert Search
  • Sign In
    • Help
    • Search History
    • Clear Session
  • Browse
    • Entire Repository  
    • Recent Additions
    • Communities & Collections
    • By Title
    • By Creator
    • By Subject
    • Most Accessed Papers
    • Most Accessed Items
    • Most Accessed Authors
  • Quick Collection  
Sign In
  • Help
  • Search History
  • Clear Session

Showing items 1 - 3 of 3

Your selections:

  • Ficus (Plants) -- South Africa -- Photographs
  • JPEG Image
  • Adobe Acrobat PDF
Creator
2Skead, C J (Cuthbert John) 1Babiana
Resource Type
2landscape photographs 2mixed material 2photographs 1clippings 1ephemera 1text
CDDate
21965-04 11972-09-06
Facets
Creator
2Skead, C J (Cuthbert John) 1Babiana
Resource Type
2landscape photographs 2mixed material 2photographs 1clippings 1ephemera 1text
CDDate
21965-04 11972-09-06
  • Title
  • Creator
  • Date

Quick View

Starting again with tree landmarks

- Babiana


  • Authors: Babiana
  • Date: 1972-09-06
  • Subjects: Ficus (Plants) -- South Africa -- Photographs , Fig -- South Africa -- Photographs
  • Language: English
  • Type: text , clippings , ephemera
  • Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/73084 , vital:30151
  • Description: Newspaper article: "This huge Moreton Bay wild fig tree in the Port Elizabeth Club grounds (the tree with the biggest spread in the city?) is no doubt one of the "nice lot of seedlings" raised from seed in 1882 by Mr John Wilson. Four were planted in the corners of Trinder Square when it was laid out as a garden in 1888. As the ohter Ficus macrophylla seedlings were distributed "far and wide," the great landmark trees at the corner of Main Road and 17th Avenue, Walmer, were probably from the same lot. (Macro-phylla means long-leafed of big-leafed.)"
  • Full Text:
  • Date Issued: 1972-09-06

Starting again with tree landmarks

  • Authors: Babiana
  • Date: 1972-09-06
  • Subjects: Ficus (Plants) -- South Africa -- Photographs , Fig -- South Africa -- Photographs
  • Language: English
  • Type: text , clippings , ephemera
  • Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/73084 , vital:30151
  • Description: Newspaper article: "This huge Moreton Bay wild fig tree in the Port Elizabeth Club grounds (the tree with the biggest spread in the city?) is no doubt one of the "nice lot of seedlings" raised from seed in 1882 by Mr John Wilson. Four were planted in the corners of Trinder Square when it was laid out as a garden in 1888. As the ohter Ficus macrophylla seedlings were distributed "far and wide," the great landmark trees at the corner of Main Road and 17th Avenue, Walmer, were probably from the same lot. (Macro-phylla means long-leafed of big-leafed.)"
  • Full Text:
  • Date Issued: 1972-09-06
Quick View

The Wonderboom, Ficus pretoriae, north of Pretoria, April 1965

- Skead, C J (Cuthbert John)


  • Authors: Skead, C J (Cuthbert John)
  • Date: 1965-04
  • Subjects: Ficus (Plants) -- South Africa -- Photographs , Fig -- South Africa -- Photographs
  • Language: English
  • Type: mixed material , photographs , landscape photographs
  • Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/73588 , vital:30207
  • Description: Caption: "The Wonderboom, Ficus pretoriae, north of Pretoria. April 1965. The central parent trunk was 12 ½ feet in diameter. The secondary growth consists of 7 separate daughter groups but two of these form grand-daughters which form a third circle around the central parent. The whole canopy is given as about 165 feet in diameter, and about 75 feet high. The measurements were 186 feet. The mother tree consists of 5 close-growing stems and her canopy is about 99 feet overall. A notice at the site says that this tree was probably able to develop in this way through being held sacred and dedicated by burial to a chief and then given tribal protection. Although it is large overall it attains this by virtue of the daughter and grand-daughters groups. The fig tree at Kaffir drift has 5 central stems and no daughter groups. It is about 168 feet in diameter of canopy, i.e. without the secondary groups. The big fig tree in Bathurst village has only one central stem yet its canopy diameter is 162 feet in diameter, i.e. from one stem."
  • Full Text:
  • Date Issued: 1965-04

The Wonderboom, Ficus pretoriae, north of Pretoria, April 1965

  • Authors: Skead, C J (Cuthbert John)
  • Date: 1965-04
  • Subjects: Ficus (Plants) -- South Africa -- Photographs , Fig -- South Africa -- Photographs
  • Language: English
  • Type: mixed material , photographs , landscape photographs
  • Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/73588 , vital:30207
  • Description: Caption: "The Wonderboom, Ficus pretoriae, north of Pretoria. April 1965. The central parent trunk was 12 ½ feet in diameter. The secondary growth consists of 7 separate daughter groups but two of these form grand-daughters which form a third circle around the central parent. The whole canopy is given as about 165 feet in diameter, and about 75 feet high. The measurements were 186 feet. The mother tree consists of 5 close-growing stems and her canopy is about 99 feet overall. A notice at the site says that this tree was probably able to develop in this way through being held sacred and dedicated by burial to a chief and then given tribal protection. Although it is large overall it attains this by virtue of the daughter and grand-daughters groups. The fig tree at Kaffir drift has 5 central stems and no daughter groups. It is about 168 feet in diameter of canopy, i.e. without the secondary groups. The big fig tree in Bathurst village has only one central stem yet its canopy diameter is 162 feet in diameter, i.e. from one stem."
  • Full Text:
  • Date Issued: 1965-04
Quick View

The Wonderboom, Ficus pretoriae, north of Pretoria, April 1965

- Skead, C J (Cuthbert John)


  • Authors: Skead, C J (Cuthbert John)
  • Date: 1965-04
  • Subjects: Ficus (Plants) -- South Africa -- Photographs , Fig -- South Africa -- Photographs
  • Language: English
  • Type: mixed material , photographs , landscape photographs
  • Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/73569 , vital:30205
  • Description: Caption: "The Wonderboom, Ficus pretoriae, north of Pretoria. April 1965. The central parent trunk was 12 ½ feet in diameter. The secondary growth consists of 7 separate daughter groups but two of these form grand-daughters which form a third circle around the central parent. The whole canopy is given as about 165 feet in diameter, and about 75 feet high. The measurements were 186 feet. The mother tree consists of 5 close-growing stems and her canopy is about 99 feet overall. A notice at the site says that this tree was probably able to develop in this way through being held sacred and dedicated by burial to a chief and then given tribal protection. Although it is large overall it attains this by virtue of the daughter and grand-daughters groups. The fig tree at Kaffir drift has 5 central stems and no daughter groups. It is about 168 feet in diameter of canopy, i.e. without the secondary groups. The big fig tree in Bathurst village has only one central stem yet its canopy diameter is 162 feet in diameter, i.e. from one stem."
  • Full Text:
  • Date Issued: 1965-04

The Wonderboom, Ficus pretoriae, north of Pretoria, April 1965

  • Authors: Skead, C J (Cuthbert John)
  • Date: 1965-04
  • Subjects: Ficus (Plants) -- South Africa -- Photographs , Fig -- South Africa -- Photographs
  • Language: English
  • Type: mixed material , photographs , landscape photographs
  • Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/73569 , vital:30205
  • Description: Caption: "The Wonderboom, Ficus pretoriae, north of Pretoria. April 1965. The central parent trunk was 12 ½ feet in diameter. The secondary growth consists of 7 separate daughter groups but two of these form grand-daughters which form a third circle around the central parent. The whole canopy is given as about 165 feet in diameter, and about 75 feet high. The measurements were 186 feet. The mother tree consists of 5 close-growing stems and her canopy is about 99 feet overall. A notice at the site says that this tree was probably able to develop in this way through being held sacred and dedicated by burial to a chief and then given tribal protection. Although it is large overall it attains this by virtue of the daughter and grand-daughters groups. The fig tree at Kaffir drift has 5 central stems and no daughter groups. It is about 168 feet in diameter of canopy, i.e. without the secondary groups. The big fig tree in Bathurst village has only one central stem yet its canopy diameter is 162 feet in diameter, i.e. from one stem."
  • Full Text:
  • Date Issued: 1965-04

  • «
  • ‹
  • 1
  • ›
  • »
  • English (United States)
  • English (United States)
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy
  • Copyright
  • Contact
  • About Vital

‹ › ×

    Clear Session

    Are you sure you would like to clear your session, including search history and login status?