On 27 November 2010 10:09, dilip dacruz <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> 1. I'm intrigued by the jaggery. Was it used as a glue? Or was it a form of
> heat insulation? I understand Jaggery is sometimes used to line tandoors.
>
> Not that I know it all :-) but Google has some pointers...

 A farmer told me that after this application they also sprinkle some
jaggery around the trees. Asked to explain the reason he said, "jaggery
attracts large black ants (domle/katmuyo) which are natural enemies of
termites. They kill and drag all termite workers to their nests". This is a
part of Goa’s traditional biological control. But the hidden termites are
perfect defenders of their nests and even snakes are scared to enter a live
termite nest. So the termite conquests in Goa would continue.
http://www.navhindtimes.in/panorama/climate-change-favours-voracious-termites

Conventional wisdom of our ancestors advocated construcation of houses
building, with materials available which are generic to the mother earth
such as stones cut form granite formation or leterite crust or mud finely
sieved mixed with lime, sand jaggery and the roofs were constructed
slantingly with enjoinment of rafters reapers wall plates, beams with over
burnt clay tiles layering and as the roof extended almost 2 1/2 feet    away
from the periphery of the walls thereby protecting wall from formation of
moss in monsoon by flow of water.
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg00974.html

Agreed, the answer is not very clear... but there's a hint of it here. FN

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