Tuesday, June 05, 2018

June 5, 2018--David Fairchild Day

For a change of pace I've been reading The Food Explorer: The Adventures of the Globe-Trotting Botanist Who Transformed What America Eats.

It chronicles the remarkable adventures of David Fairchild who in the mid to late 19th century travelled the world in search of foods not available in America and as a consequence the thousands of plants and seeds he sent back to the new U.S. Department of Agriculture, which were test-cultivated by farmers, dramatically changed our diet.

Before Fairchild what was available for Americans to eat was quite limited. Eating in America was about subsistence not enjoyment.

Without what Fairchild rounded up there would be no citrus fruits available to us--no oranges, no grapefruits, no lemons. There would be no avocados, no pomegranates, no mangoes, no bananas, no grapes. 

Until stumbling on Daniel Stone's book, I had never heard of David Fairchild. I did know about the sumptuous Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden in Coral Gables, Florida but did not associate it with him nor with what he did to transform an important part of our lives.

Thinking about him and the hundreds of others who profoundly but without due recognition contributed to life in America I thought that perhaps there should be a David Fairchild Day so that Americans could learn about his achievements as well as hopefully be inspired to venture out on their own.

Running this thought by Rona, who liked it as well as the book, she suggested coming up with a list of 364 other people we could celebrate in modest ways on days of their own--many of whom are lost to history--as a way of recognizing their achievements and, again, to inspire us. Especially young people, who are seeking to lead adventurous, accomplished lives.

Provoked by her, here is a simple of the kind of people who might make Rona's top 364--

Sybil Ludington Day: 

There are others who deserve more credit than Paul Revere, who didn't finish his ride before being captured by the British. Notably, Sybil Ludington, a sixteen-year-old girl who rode sidesaddle alone in the rain for 40 miles (twice Revere's distance) to alert her father's troops that they needed to meet at the Ludington farm to fight back British raiders in Danbury, Connecticut. During her ride she used a long stick to knock on doors but also to fight off a highwayman she encountered on route.

James Armistead Lafayette Day:

During the Revolutionary War some aristocrats sent their slaves to battle in their place, but James Armistead Lafayette, a slave, asked his master for permission to fight on the side of the rebels. He became the first African-American double agent. First, he was assigned to spy on the defector and traitor, General Benedict Arnold, who trusted him so much that he asked Arimstead to guide British troops through the local roads. Subsequently, he served undercover with British General Cornwallis and while with him reported secretly to the patriots about British troop and arms deployment that contributed significantly to the capture of Cornwallis in the Battle of Yorktown.

After the war ended, he returned to his life of servitude since a 1783 law that freed slaves who served in place of their masters did not apply to him since he was technically a volunteer. But with the help of his owner and General Lafayette, he was granted his freedom.

Martha Graham Day:

She was an American dancer and choreographer whose style, the Graham technique, reshaped American dance and is still widely used here and worldwide. She in effect created modern dance, which liberated dance from the restrictions of traditional ballet. To do so she needing to battle the dance establishment which largely rejected her highly-charged, "primitive" style. She danced and choreographed for over 70 years and was the first dancer to perform in the White House and received the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Lydia Folger Fowler Day:

Born in1822, in 1850, Fowler was the first American-born woman to receive an MD degree. After attending Wheaton Seminary in Norton, MA, she entered Central Medical College in Syracuse, NY, one of the few institutions that accepted women as students. During her second term, while still a student, she also served as principal of the "Female Department." After graduating, she was appointed professor of midwifery and diseases of women at the college, becoming thereby the first woman professor in an American medical college. Later, she lived and practiced in New York City, lecturing frequently to women on hygiene and physiology while championing women's rights and the temperance movement.

If you have further suggestions about who might be honored in this way, please pass them along.

Having my change of pace, now back to reading about the potential for fascism in America,  including a fascinating book, Jules Archer's, The Plot to Seize the White House, that chronicles the movement in 1934, during the second year of the presidency of Franklin Roosevelt, to replace him with an American-style facsist dictator. 

Leaders of this crackpot movement, funded by major bankers and business leaders (allegedly including J.P. Morgan), offered the role of "American Caesar" to two-time Medal of Honor winner, Marine General Smedley Butler. He was to recruit 500,000 veterans to form the "Silver Shirts," the American equivalent of Mussolini's Black Shirt and Hitler's Brown Shirt thugs. 

A true patriot and supporter of FDR's, General Butler exposed the plot and testified about it to the initial, liberal version of the House Un-American Activities Committee, which found his testimony to be credible.

On the other hand, maybe I'll watch a little of the French Open.

David Fairchild With Mangoes

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Tuesday, May 12, 2015

May 12, 2015--Water, Water

Rona was watering the plants on the terrace. It is a late spring here and she was trying to help the plants catch up with the calendar. Some savvy garden person had recommended a week of Boomerang application. Boomerang being a fertilizer that purports to help plants bounce back from the kind of harsh winter the city had endured.

"Just what they need," Rona said, adding, "A boost. But what the plants really need is just the right amount of water."

"Just like us," I said, "We too need just the right amount of watering. Come to think of it," I thought for the first time, "Why is it that they and we require water to live? To survive? We can do without food for weeks but only a few days without water."

Rona paused in her watering. "I'm embarrassed to admit that I too never thought about that. I mean the specifics. The biology in our case and the botany in theirs." She pointed toward her sage plants.

"I think it's universal," I said. "I mean I think all life on earth--animals, sea creatures, all vegetation--all, everything requires water."

"And maybe oxygen too?"

"Probably. Water after all is largely oxygen. H2O. The O being oxygen."

"Remember the time we were in the Namibian Dessert? You had work to do in Windhoek and I came along so after you were done we could take a week to look around."

"I remember that. Great landscape, great animals, interesting people."

"Unusual for us,"Rona recalled, "we hired a guide to take us into the dessert. It was amazing. Some of the world's biggest sand dunes. And . . ."

"I know where you're going with this," I said. "There were those pants that were millennia old. Thousands of years old. He said, the oldest plants on earth."

"How parched they looked. Actually dead."

"But from his canteen he wet one with maybe two, three drops of water. That was all."

"And with that they sprang back to life."

"As with Boomerang," I winked.

"Exactly. Amazing."

"I need to learn more about water. Probably from Wikipedia."

Which I did and here is some of what I learned--

First, the Namibian plant is Welwitschia, named for the German botanist who classified it, and, yes, some are more than 2,000 years old.

And, also true, all living things, all, require water to live. They, we use water in different ways--humans versus, say, sage plants.

For us water is essential to the proliferation of life. It carries out this role by allowing organic compounds to react in ways that contribute to cellular replication. It is vital as a solvent, dissolving many cell components and the chemicals and compounds cell division requires. In this way water is essential to many, perhaps most of the body's metabolic processes.

In one called catabolism, water is used to break the bonds of large molecules in order to generate smaller ones--glucose, fatty acids, and amino acids--to be used as fuel for biological energy. Without water these metabolic processes could not exist. And neither could we.

For sage plants and other flora water is essential to photosynthesis and respiration. Photosynthetic cells such as chlorophil use the sun's energy to split off water's hydrogen from its oxygen. Hydrogen is then combined with CO2, which is absorbed from the air or water, to form glucose and release oxygen. All living plant cells use these fuels and in this cycle oxidize the hydrogen and carbon to capture the sun's energy and, through cellular respiration, re-form water and CO2.  

"Come on out and take a look at the akebia," Rona called downstairs to me, luring me away from the computer. "It's about to bloom and the flowers have such a lovely scent."

"Your garden is amazing," I said. "As Wiki says . . ."

She cut me off. "Forget Wiki. Sit by the honeysuckle," She whispered. "I saw a humming bird. Rare for the city. But they love the nectar of honeysuckle."

"Sit very still," Rona suggested. I did and sure enough, after a half hour . . .

Welwitschia Plant

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