Morning all the plant lovers,

In Rajasthan, what I came to know from the elderly people about Calotropis 
gigantea is:

It is believed that the white flowers are mostly liked by the Lord Shiva family 
(I am not getting exact story behind this). Therefore, planting this species in 
the house gardens at particular time (probably in night of full moon day- 
Poornima of Swati Nakshatra), will give birth to the Lord Ganesha in its roots 
(shape is considered to be that of Lord Ganesha). And after four-five years the 
owner could take out the root again at particular timings.. He would find the 
shape of lord Ganesha. Keep that inside home/worshipping place and the family 
or house memebers would never face any problem. 

I will circulate exact and full story/belief for C. gigantea afterwards, again 
reviving my notes on the cultural/traditional beliefs of plants and animals.

Wishes

Satya Prakash Mehra

--- On Wed, 7/1/09, Sid <[email protected]> wrote:
From: Sid <[email protected]>
Subject: [indiantreepix:7250] Re: White Giant Milkweed
To: "JANAKI TURAGA" <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, 7 January, 2009, 9:12 AM

Hi,

I think these are the vareities of the same species, Calotropis gigantea. The 
white variety is rare in Tamilnadu as I have not seen it in the wild. This is a 
photo I took in a restaurant garden, in East coast road in Madras. The white 
variety is mainly grown for its sacred beliefs, as Satya Prakash has mentioned.


sid. 

2009/1/7 JANAKI TURAGA <[email protected]>

Dear Mr.Mehra,
Can you share what is its mythological importance in Rajasthan?
Janaki Turaga

 
On 1/6/09, Satya Prakash <[email protected]> wrote:




This plant is commonly sighted in urban areas of Bharatpur, Rajasthan. Due to 
its mythological importance, it is planted in &/or outside the house. Rajendra 
Colony in front of world heritage - Keoladeo National Park is one such example.



Wishes
Rajputana 

--- On Mon, 5/1/09, J.M. Garg <[email protected]> wrote:


From: J.M. Garg <[email protected]>

Subject: [indiantreepix:7124] Re: White Giant Milkweed
To: [email protected]
Cc: "treepix Indian" <[email protected]>, "JANAKI TURAGA" 
<[email protected]>


Date: Monday, 5 January, 2009, 9:58 AM




Reply from Janaki ji:
"Thanks Madhuri, and Gargji. I think the white one is rare. The lady in the 
house where it was planted told me that this was found in Rajasthan, near 
Haryana side, in the wild, and was brought and planted by them. And apparently 
it is worshipped too, especially in Diwali day.


I was actually intrigued as to why anybody would have this plant in their 
house, until I noticed its flowers which were white. 
There was no lavender flowered plant in the house though there were plenty of 
them in the entire area growing wild. So I presume that the white flowered one 
is associated with something holy.


Now that I recall, the plant itself is considered to be dear to Lord Ganesha 
and it is one of the main plants for doing puja on Ganesh Chaturthi in Andhra 
Pradesh and I think in Karnataka too. I wonder why! Ganesha is worshipped with 
lot of flowers and wild plants on Ganesh Chaturthi!


Janaki Turaga"

 

2009/1/4 J.M. Garg <[email protected]>




Hi, Janaki ji,
 
I think the following extracts from Wikipedia 
link (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calotropis_gigantea) will clarify:

 
Calotropis gigantea (Crown flower) is a species of Calotropis, native to 
Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand, Sri Lanka, India and China.


It is a large shrub growing to 4 m tall. It has clusters of waxy flowers that 
are either white or lavender in colour. Each flower consists of five pointed 
petals and a small, elegant "crown" rising from the centre, which holds the 
stamens. The plant has oval, light green leaves and milky stem.



 
2009/1/4 Madhuri Pejaver <[email protected]> 





is gigantia a species? or indica?

i do not know whether it is a subspecies, but in marathi the one with white 
flowers is called as mandar, while the one with purplish is called rui.


the food plant for tiger varity of butterflies.
the one with white flowers is used for puja for lord Ganesha
madhuri
--- On Sat, 1/3/09, JANAKI TURAGA <[email protected]> wrote:



> From: JANAKI TURAGA <[email protected]>
> Subject: [indiantreepix:7077] White Giant Milkweed

> To: [email protected], "treepix Indian" 
> <[email protected]>


> Date: Saturday, January 3, 2009, 9:59 PM



> HI,
> I found this tree in a home which was the Giant Milkweed
> but with white
> flowers. This plant which is the size of a small tree about
> 8 feet high, had
> whiteflowers. It was planted by the people living in the


> house.
> Would appreciate any information about the white flower
> giant milkweed. Is
> it a separate sub species?
> The 3 attached photos show the entire plant, the flower and
> buds; and fruit.


>
> Thanks
> Janaki Turaga
>
>




 


-- 
With regards,
J.M.Garg


"We often ignore the beauty around us"
Creating Awareness about Indian Flora & 
Fauna:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jmgarg1


For learning about our trees & plants, please visit/ join Google e-group 
(Indiantreepix) http://groups.google.co.in/group/indiantreepix?hl=en






-- 
With regards,
J.M.Garg
"We often ignore the beauty around us"
Creating Awareness about Indian Flora & 
Fauna:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jmgarg1


For learning about our trees & plants, please visit/ join Google e-group 
(Indiantreepix) http://groups.google.co.in/group/indiantreepix?hl=en





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