Thanks,  Chadwell ji,  for great insights.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "C CHADWELL" <[email protected]>
Date: 4 Jan 2017 4:24 a.m.
Subject: Pleurospermum amabile - new to eFI
To: "J.M. Garg" <[email protected]>
Cc:

I was recently contacted by Roger Nix to try to identify a
wonderful-looking (to my eyes)
umbellifer (now Apiaceae family) growing through snow he had
photographed during a high-altitude
trek in Bhutan.

Few have the funds available to undertake such a trek or perhaps the
physical strength,
as its involves crossing a number of high passes in Northern Bhutan.

There appears to only be one species of Pleurospermum (of the 9 or so from
the Himalaya)
posted on eFI.   Have taken a cursory glance at the postings.  A number of
members thought the
assorted images might have been of P.candollei but they are definitely
not.  It is my intention
to check more closely at some stage.

For the present, let me concentrate upon the distinctive-looking
Pleurospermum amabile:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/rogernix/10857816823/in/album-
72157637673450755/  and
https://www.flickr.com/photos/rogernix/10857843443/in/album-
72157637673450755/

What a striking plant.  I have not seen it in the wild myself but knew it
as a medicinal species when
I was a consultant to 'The Royal Government of Bhutan' on 'The Cultivation
of Medicinal Plants for
Traditional Medicine' in the 1990s.

'Flora of Bhutan' says this is rather rare but a striking endemic to Bhutan
and Tibet (south of Lhasa
into Chumbi Valley and across towards the border with NW Yunnan).  Inhabits
screes and exposed
turf @ 3950-4700m.

Chumbi was the route British mountaineering expeditions followed from
Indian territory for attempts
on Everest from Tibet (the north).  Everest, as we all know, was first
climbed in 1953, from the south,
through Nepal.   Nepal had been closed to foreigners until 1949.

Those members interested in Himalayan flora know 'Flowers of the
Himalaya'.  The authors, Oleg Polunin
and Adam Stainton, participated in joint Royal Horticultural
Society/Natural History Museum of London
expeditions to Nepal in the years before and after the first ascent of
Everest.

Whilst it was the resources of a British Expedition combined with the
technical climbing skill of Hillary (
who was first to negotiated the 'Hillary Step' near the summit) which were
essential, the most significant
contribution to the success was undoubtedly Sherpa Tenzing Norgay.  His
previous experience with teams
from Switzerland (who got painfully close to the summit, the year before,
if my memory serves me correctly)
made the difference.  It is of no consequence who actually stood on the
summit first and ALL mountaineering
expeditions STAND ON THE SHOULDERS OF THOSE WHO WENT BEFORE and one should
never forget
the contributions of all those who involved in such ventures, whether
'Britishers' or locals - whose vital role
is often over-looked.

Whilst not a mountaineer or rock-climber myself, I understand enough to
state that the dreadful "tabloid-style"
journalism which proclaims high mountains have been 'Conquered' should be
PERMANTLY DELETED and
never used again!   Such IGNORANCE....  Such mountains are NOT
'conquered' The mountain Gods PERMIT
some to reach the top and then they should be GRATEFUL to be allowed back
down again in one piece and
that no member of the expedition (including sherpas and porters) are harmed.

IF one wishes to ascend to the top of a mountain then fine and the
physical (and not forgetting mental)
achievement can be admired.   I would certainly have admired the views IF I
had ever 'scaled' a high
Himalayan Peak - I never did but it should not be at the expense of other
lives, especially porters or sherpas.....








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