in.flo.res.cence ~ noun
1. a flowering or blossoming.
2. Botany.
a. the arranging of flowers on the axis.
b. the flowering part of a plant.
c. a flower cluster.
d. flowers collectively.



Sunday, August 8, 2010

Spanish Moss

We use Spanish moss everyday at Sweet Gardenia. We use it to finish a plant, covering the plastic plant pots inside a decorative basket. We use it to cover mechanics in floral designs. We use it for texture in floral designs too.  But what do we know about it? Not much. First it's not a moss, it's an air plant, and a flowering one at that.  And it has a storied past!  For instance on the Gulf Coast Rufus Joseph Tillman shared this romantic story with his great-granddaughter, Sherry Hicks when she inquired about Spanish moss growing thick in the trees around Mobile, Alabama. A Spanish soldier fell in love at first sight with an Indian chief's favorite daughter. Though the chieftain forbade the couple to see each other, the Spaniard was too lovestruck to stop meeting the maiden in secret. The father found them out and ordered his braves to tie the Spaniard high up in the top of an ancient oak tree. The Spaniard had only to disavow his love to be freed, but he steadfastly refused. Guards were posted to keep anyone -- the chief's daughter above all -- from giving food or water to the poor Spaniard. The Spaniard grew weaker and weaker, but he still would not renounce his love for the girl. Near the end, the Chief tried to persuade him once more to stay away from his daughter. The Spaniard answered that not only would he refuse to disavow his love, but that his love would continue to grow even after death. When at last the Spaniard died, the chief kept the body tied up in the tree as a warning to any other would-be suitors. Before long, the Indians began to notice that the Spaniard's beard continued to grow. The Indian maiden refused ever to take a husband -- unless the Spaniard's beard died and vanished from the tree. As the years went by, the beard only grew stronger and longer, covering trees far from the Indian maiden's village. Legend says that when the Spanish Moss is gone, the Spaniard's love will have finally died with it.
Anyway, I enjoyed finding out a little more about this "moss" and thought maybe you would too.

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