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Thursday, November 26, 2020

Timberi/Diospyros malabarcia

 


                      TIMBERI HAS ANTISEPTIC PROPERTIES

   Timibiri is a dry zone tree, but it is also generally found near streams or damp ground. Botanically it is called Diospyros malabarcia. In Tamil it isKnown as  Ttmbilik-key or Panichchia.

      It is large densely leaved tree with dark, Rather smooth bark. Its branches Spread irregularly and it has both male and female flowers. The male flowersAre rounded or triangular, lobed, pale green in colour and coated with silkyHair. The female flowers are thick,  pointed at the apex, and have a few dark Hair near the calyx. The fruits conspicuously larg and are about 11/2 to 3 inches in diameter.

    These are usually solitary, and are coated with a reddish colour. these seeds are large ,brown, coppressed and variable in nimber.

    The wood is nearly white  with a trace of black heartwood. The fruitsafford a gummy juice, and is used for preserving fishing nets and lines.The ripe fruit is said contain 20 or 40 per cent of tannic acid.

    The gum is used medically as an astringent, and is useful in diarrhoea and internal heamorrhage. A gargle is made from an infusion of the fruit. The exudation from the trees is an antiseptic  and protection against insects.

    Timbiri is known as Tinduka in Sanskrit. In Bengal a preparation is made by heating the fruit in a large vessel, and boiling and juice which has been extracted and a preservative to planks of wood.

     A brownish liquid used for dying and tanning is prepared from the half ripeFruit. The ripe fruit is edible and is Beneficial in blood diseases and in gonorrhea And leprosy.

    In India “tunika oil” obtained from the seeds is used in dysentery and diarrhoea.

Although the ripe fruit is very sweet insects will not touch it. A infusion or decoction of the rind is  useful in chronic dysentery and diarrhoea.

   The Timbiri tree is sometimes known as wild mangoosteen. A poultice of the bark can be applied to boils and tumours ; a decoction of the bark mixed with gees is a very efficacious dressing for burns.

   The powder of the bark can be given like coffee for coughs. An extract of the fruit in dose of one grains with water, three times a day is an excellent remedy fir chronic diarrhoea and dysentery. A watery soloution of the extract is a vlabule vaginal douche in leucorrhoea.

    The fruit juice is an efficacious agent which cheek bleeding. An infusion of the ftuit is an excellent gargle for sore throats. In asthma the dried rind of fruitis smoked in dose of 45 grains.

     Thimbiri is a very important for parturient mothers. The labour room or the special apartment where children were  born  in  ancient village home was knownAs “Timbiri Geya”. This is dark  room with one door.Darkness has been found to be good  the new born baby.

Timibiri is another tree that needs our care and protection.

 

 

 

Artocarpus heterophyllus/Jak


 

                                    JAK IS NUTRITIOUS

   Jak  (Artocarpus heterophyllus) . Soft (vala) and hard (waraka). The waraka or hard jack is more popular than      the soft.

  The bark is used mainly for medicinal purposes. It is widely used for sprains and fractures.

   Jack when tender is called polos. This is a delicious curry among the Sinhalese and Tamils. In the diet chart of the ancient kings of Sri Lanka This polos curry was never absent. Nursing mothers are given polos curry and even boiled jack to increase their milk. Plos is given as a curry To patient from diarrhoea. This helps to settle the stomach.

   The king’s menu was a well  balanced diet. It was arranged by educated Vedaralas who served the king.

    Polos is a curry that is relished by expectant mothers. The curative value of polos is digestive, nutritious and helps to enrich breast milk.

    The vala or the soft ripe fruit is eaten by the villages even on an empty stomach. It is a laxative. It helps to clear the bowels and to digest the food. Vala is

Given to  children suffering from bronchitis. This is given in the “Kema” it is not possible to prove scientifically how the 'kema act, but all we know is that the answer the problem. The  vala bulb are kept dew, dipped in bees’ honey and Early in the morning patients are given the juice.

    They are given one bulb every morning to be taken on empty stomach. Vala and waraka are now available as canned fruits.

   The waraka tree has a difference medicine value. Waraka   barks are  specially used for  sprains.

The waraka leaves are dried, powered and poured like coffee. This coffee is used by diabetic patient.

In the standard work on indigenous medicine “Sarasansepa” the following prescription for diabetes is given.

“Pakuwanan  Moshapatran Chrunan Tavilana Tenayat Pramehan Sakalan Sigran Masaya Muttra Sanasayah”

    The meaning of above is as follow: pound of well the ripe leaves(of the jack tree) Fry it in gingelly oil. Take and diabetes will undoubtedly    vanish forthwith The dosage is two tablespoonsful twice a day. One can hardly imagine that so simple a remedy have such marked result on this diseases. It look too simple a remedy to cure so formidable a  disease but the fact it is mentioned in a standred work on medicine, shows that it has been an effective remedy.

    History has indicated that fruit have been remedies of the higest effcecy in quite a long lisr of diseases. Fruit cures are coming in to great favour in medical Institution and among practitioners in Western countries. In these cures the patient are placed on an excelusive ftuit diate for a period of several days.TheParticular fruit to be eaten are determined by the nature and requirement of the  Condition under treatment.

 

Timberi/Diospyros malabarcia

                        TIMBERI HAS ANTISEPTIC PROPERTIES    Timibiri is a dry zone tree, but it is also generally found near streams or...