Thanks, Chadwell ji
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "C CHADWELL" <[email protected]>
Date: 23 Nov 2016 3:22 am
Subject: Bergenia ciliata being grown at New York Botanical Garden
To: "J.M. Garg" <[email protected]>
Cc:

Just posted images of a container-grown specimen of Bergenia ciliata in a
private
garden in New England.

Here we have a plant just coming into leaf near the Rock Garden at New York
Botanical Garden,
The Bronx.

Whilst the upper surfaces did not appear particularly hairy (the degree of
hairiness varies on the upper
surface and can be +/- glabrous) one of the petioles appears decidedly
'hairy' so presumably it is this
species, though somewhat surprising it copes outdoors at NY get seriously
low winter temperatures.


I was on a lecture tour (mostly to North American Rock Garden Society
chapters) which provided

the opportunity for me to spend some time in the herbaria of the New York
Botanical Garden (when

speaking to the Manhattan Chapter) and Ann Arbor, Michigan (when speaking
to the Great Lakes

Chapter, NARGS and gave a seminar at the University about the 'Himalayan
Travels of Walter Koelz'

 who with Thakur Rup Chand from Lahoul and their local collectors made
extensive collections in the

NW Himalaya including Kulu Valley, Lahoul & Ladakh in the 1930s; Koelz was
a zoologist engaged by

Russian NIcholas Roerich for the Urusvati Institute at Naggar, Kulu Valley
and pressed a Kohli Memorial

Gold Medal to the Herbarium, see: https://sites.google.com/a/
shpa.org.uk/main/kohli-memorial-gold-medals (scroll

down to 2011).



Duplicate sets of pressed specimens collected for Roerich went to Ann Arbor
and the New York Botanical Garden,

where they were subsequently identified and labelled by Dr Ralph Stewart
after he retired from being Principal of

the Gordon College, Rawalpindi.  Stewart, whilst working in Pakistan
regularly visited the New York Botanic Garden

Herbarium.



*The best quality set of pressed specimens (with good field notes) I know
of the flora of upper Kulu Valley and*

*Lahoul anywhere in the world are at Ann Arbor, Michigan - far better than
Kew or the Natural History Museum in*

*London.   What a shame that the duplicate set of these lies, abandoned for
80 years "behind-the-scenes" at the*

*Urusvati Institute - no doubt many of the thousands of specimens have
rotted away or become infested by insects.*

*What a waste of such a hard-won resource.  I have tried, on 3 occasions,
to gain access to what is left of the *

specimens to undertake an initial assessment but have not been permitted
entry......



*This saddens me.  Those is a senior position should have done something
about it decades ago!*



Best Wishes,


Chris Chadwell


81 Parlaunt Road
SLOUGH
SL3 8BE
UK

www.shpa.org.uk

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"efloraofindia" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/indiantreepix.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to