Welwitschias were first discovered in 1859 by an Austrian botanist named Friedrich Welwitsch. Of course, the native people had known about this plant for a long time already, but Mr. Welwitsch was the first western scientist to find it. According to the story, Mr. Welwitsch was so surprised by his discovery that he just knelt down next to the plant and stared at it. Later, he sent some plant material to Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker, who was the director of Kew Gardens in England. Mr. Welwitsch wanted to name the plant Tumboa, which is what the native Angolan people called it, but Sir Hooker decided to name the plant in honor of Mr. Welwitsch. The full name is Welwitschia mirabilis, and mirabilis means "wonderful" or "marvelous" in Latin.
There are lots of mirabilis things to know about welwitschias, like for instance that a single plant can be anywhere between 400 and 1,000 years old, and a few might even be as old as 2,000. This is even older than Mom, and I think she's pretty darned old!
Another amazing thing about welwitschias is that each plant only has two leaves, and it has these same two leaves for its entire life, even if it lives 1,000 years! Of course, after 1,000 years, those two leaves might look a little shredded and ragged, but they are still the original two leaves. Eventually, the leaves can grow as long as four meters. The tallest welwitschia known is 1.8 meters high, and the widest one is 8.7 meters.
The place where welwitschias grow is very, very dry because it is a desert. Sometimes there is no rain for two or three years, or even longer. But the welwitschias are very smart, and they live close to the coast, where there is a lot of fog. And the reason there is fog there is because during the night, the hot desert air meets up with the cold currents in the ocean, and that makes a really thick fog that lasts until about 10:00 a.m. the next day. The fog turns into water drops on the welwitschia leaves, and it runs down the leaves and into the ground to water the plant. Also the leaves can absorb some moisture directly from the air. And there is a long taproot that goes way down in the ground, looking for any water that might be down there.
Female cones in flower |
Male cones in flower |
A long time ago, people used to eat the core of the welwitschias, especially the female plants because they were yummier. They either ate them raw or they baked them in hot ashes. This is why the Herero people called the plant onyanga, which means "onion of the desert."
Well, when the cactus show and sale were happening earlier this month, Mom saw some welwitschia plants for sale. She didn't know much about them, but she went home and read about them on the internet, and after that she decided to buy one, even though they were kind of expensive. So now Mom has a welwitschia of her very own, but hers is not 1000 years old yet, or even 500 years old. It is only maybe one year old, so it is still kind of small. Mom hopes it will be happy and will not up and die on her, like a lot of plants have done in the past. But if it does die, then Mom says she will not take it personally. She will just figure that she was not meant to grow welwitschias, and she will not get another one.
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