Drowning in Uganda

Well, I’m drowning.  Drowning in the sensory riches of Africa.  It’s not like the sensory overload that I’ve heard happens in India, where your receptors distort under the volume of stimuli.  Here it’s just so rich and so fecund, and the colours are so delicious that you stand, spellbound, and smile (or if you’ve arrived sleep deprived, cry).

And I’ve stumbled again on a tree I knew briefly twenty five years ago.  I’m thinking that it’s got to be Cassia spectabilis (syn. Senna spectabilis).  Its wide canopy hung over the mortuary in the mission hospital in Zambia where I was staying, and its huge panicles of yellow flowers spilled their sweet fragrance upon the women, wailing for days on end, in its deep shade.  If the scent was visible, it would have dropped from the flowers with syrupy viscosity, and langoured in deep pools in those shadowy depths.

And here it is again, the scent trawling up deep memories to accompany the very in-the-moment smile.

Discussion

  1. Uganda is not only where the savannah meets the vast lakes of East Africa, but also where the East African Savannah meets with the West African Jungle. It is indeed the pearl of Africa.

Leave a Comment

More Blog Posts

A Whole Lot of Tommyrot

I have a sister (colourful, excitable, b. 1959) who used to describe some flavours as tasting exactly like the smell of something else.  My Dad (v non-excitable, b. 1928) told her she was speaking a ...

Would someone please tell me what to think?

I think I’m past the plant snobbery phase.  You kind of have to let it go when you observe yourself starting to really enjoy plants again that you once dismissed, and so accept what you’ve suspec ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #4: Clematis maximowicziana

You’ve really got to love a shrub or climber that waits until now to do something really big, blousy and generous.  There’s not that many of them.  Most that flower now have been doing their thi ...