Tuesday, October 1, 2024

Know Your Birthday Flower: October Birth Flower - Amarillo or Marigold (Tagetes patula)

                      Know Your Birthday Flower 

October Birth Flower - Amarillo or Marigold (Tagetes patula)  

 It was the Romans, more than two thousand years ago, who institutionalized the flower with their goddess, Flora, a name we used today. They held a Festival called Floralia in late April or early May, and two temples were built in her honor. Roman influence lives to this day with Flores de Mayo (Internet)

 Dr Abe V Rotor 
 Living with Nature Center
       San Vicente, Ilocos Sur        
 
Top, October Birth Flower - Amarillo or Marigold (Tagetes patula)  
Coed picks flowers of Kamantigi (Impatiens balsamina) at the former 
EcoSanctuary of St Paul University, QC; Garden Chart indicating birthday 
months and flowers. UST Botanical Garden, Manila 

January Birth Flower - the Carnation or Snowdrop
February Birth Flower - the Violet or Primrose
March Birth Flower - the Jonquil (aka Daffodil or Narcissus)
April Birth Flower - the Sweet pea or Daisy
May Birth Flower - the Lily of the Valley
June Birth Flower - the Rose
July Birth Flower - the Larkspur or Water Lily
August Birth Flower - the Gladiolus or Poppy
September Birth Flower - the Aster or Morning Glory
October Birth Flower - the Calendula (Marigold)
November Birth Flower - the Chrysanthemum
December Birth Flower - the Narcissus

Can you identify from these photographs the flower of your birth month?

  
  
3, 4
  
5, 6
  
7, 8
  
9, 10
  
11, 12
  
13, 14
15 

 The Language of Flowers is a fine art of expressing affection, a tradition which started during the conservative Victorian era in England, as a matter of etiquette and social grace, when people then were inhibited to express their feelings openly. 

But it was the Romans, more than two thousand years ago, who institutionalized the flower with their goddess, Flora, a name we used today specially in the scientific circle. They held a Festival called Floralia in late April or early May, and two temples were built in her honor.  

Roman influence lives to this day with Flores de Mayo, a similar festival of merriment,  beauty contests and floral parades.  It is also in May young women offer flowers on the altar, a practice that has declined in modern times.     

The Language of Flowers has vastly expanded in today's liberated society, and has permeated into all walks of life in social gatherings and special events, or without any occasion in particular.  

Flowers, flowers, if you may, 
roses on Valentines Day; 
bouquet in June and May, 
and wreath on All Saints Day. 
                                            
- AVR 2013

Flowers are perhaps the ultimate symbol of loving and caring, of remembering and consoling, congratulating, atoning, forgiving, or simply greeting.  Flowers open The Secret Garden of Hodgson Burnett, bring repentance in The Black Narcissus, stirs nationalism in the Sampaguita Song. Petals bring fairy tale on the wedding aisle, heavenly accolade in floral confetti.  Above all it is the flower that silenced a thousand guns. 

The flower is the most imitated gift of Nature, never equaled, never surpassed  - and never.

Trivia:  What is the science specialized in the cultivation of flowers? 
Acknowledgment:  Internet 

Gladiolus
2 Gladiolus.
3. Aster
4. Narcissus
5 Cosmos
6 Daffodils
7 Chrysanthemum
8 Carnation
9 Violet
10 Pseudo Narcissus
11 Aster
12 Lily of the Valley
13 and 14. white and pink flowers of balibago
15 Chichirica

Trivia: Floriculture, a branch of Horticulture

Part 2 - October Birth Flower
 - Amarillo or Marigold (Tagetes patula) 

Amarillo is an erect, smooth, branched, rank-smelling herb.  It is similar to Ahito (Tagetes erecta) except that it is smaller, with finer leaves and smaller heads. 

Amarillo is cultivated for ornamental purposes in the Philippines. A native of Mexico, it is now widely distributed in cultivation. The flowers have digestive, diuretic and sedative properties.  Other properties include: nematicidal, larvicidal,  antibacterial, antifungal, and anti-inflammatory.  
Dried flowers are used for coloring foods and textiles.

Acknowledgement with gratitude:  Medicinal Plants of the Philippines by E Quisumbing; Useful Plants of the Philippines by WH Brown;  Internet ~

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