Live and
learn (3)
Tawa
Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons
Two words this week, both relating to New Zealand.
Tawa (Beilschmiedia tawa) is a tall evergreen tree in the laurel family. It bears sprays of pale green flowers which develop large, purple fruits resembling damsons or plums.
Tawa fruitImage source
The fruit can be eaten, but is said to taste of turpentine! The stones, or kernels, can be roasted for food, and the bark used to produce a drink.
The timber is widely used for furniture and flooring.
TawaImage courtesy Wikimedia Commons
Tawa is also the South Asian name for a large, flat, circular griddle, used to cook chapattis and other flatbreads, and for frying meat, or paneer (often called ‘Indian cottage cheese’)
WetaImage courtesy Wikimedia Commons
The second word is weta. Weta is a large, flightless brown insect in a group of about one hundred species in the grasshopper family. It is mainly nocturnal and omnivorous, often scavenging, though the giant and tree weta feed on lichens, leaves and fruit.
It is native to New Zealand, and has few natural predators but has fallen foul of introduced mammals. Consequently, some weta species are now considered critically endangered.


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I would think the weta is mostly under threat by Australian possums, a very bad import to the country.
ReplyDeletePeople don't think about the consequences of alien species, sadly.
DeleteLearn something new every day - from your posts!
ReplyDeleteI play Polygon and find all sorts of unfamiliar words!
DeleteI feel quite confident to comment here today Janice (as I live in New Zealand) - I have not eaten Tawa fruit, nor come across it but the wood is very beautiful & looks wonderful in furniture or especially flooring. Yes Weta's can be quite large - to me are scary looking creatures & especially when you are hurrying to the cowshed in the dark early hours of the morning & wonder what the large bump is inside your gumboot, only to remove it & find a large weta inside !!!!! Cannot print the words that were uttered!!!
ReplyDeleteYikes! I certainly would not appreciate a weta in my boot. I feel quite shivery thinking about it!
DeleteThe Tawa leaves look like what I grew up with, the california bay laurels and they, too produce bay nuts that look similar to the Tawa nuts -they look like little avocados but taste like turpentine. They are distant relatives in the same botanical family, which includes laurels, avocado trees, and cinnamon. Interesting. I enjoy plant science.
ReplyDeleteThat's interesting. I can't imagine eating something that tastes of turpentine!
Deletethat cute bug does look like it might be delicious...I would try it, if it hopped on my plate .
ReplyDelete😧🤣😂
DeleteI don't think I would like to unexpectedly come upon a weta in my boot. Now I know what Paneer is too, so thank you. I assumed it was some kind of flatbread.
ReplyDeletePaneer sounds as though it should be bread of some sort, doesn't it?
DeleteAre you collecting words for future scrabble sessions?
ReplyDeleteGood idea, but no-one will play with me . . . sn'f, sn'f.
DeleteWetas are very cool - we have plenty here but they freak Mr B out somewhat. I have a Tawa (well flat iron griddle that used to be used for cooking flat bread etc on open fires or a coal range). As for the tree - the fruit looks too similar to olives but taste aside I'd be scared to eat them - we have poisonous stuff too and tou never can be too sure.
ReplyDeleteI understand Mr B's reaction. Though I find such things fascinating in the abstract, reality would be different, though I am rather fond of homegrown minibeasts.
DeleteWeta I knew about, Tawa not at all. Lifelong learning is a wonderful thing!
ReplyDeleteMy attitude precisely.
Deleteall three are new to me and I would not let a weta sit on my fingers.. or eat that fruit, very interesting and I like the names of each, so foreign to me
ReplyDeleteI'm not keen on handling insects - I would need gloves at least!
DeleteNew Zealand’s natural lexicon stretches from the versatile tawa, valued for its timber and curious fruit, to the resilient weta, a nocturnal survivor now threatened in its own fragile ecosystem
ReplyDeleteI think New Zealand must be a fascinating country, full of rare and wonderful sights.
DeleteNever heard of these - and likely to forget when I leave this post... I usually look up things every day myself, how many stay in my memory is another matter... ;)
ReplyDeleteI forget, too. I write them down in the vain hope of retaining them! Some entirely useless things stick . . .
ReplyDeleteInteresting to see trees and fruit from around the world. One thing that is creepy to me is the spiny grasp of a grasshopper on my fingers, lol.
ReplyDeleteIt doesn't appeal to me, either.
DeleteTastes like turpentine. Yikes.
ReplyDeleteNot very inviting . . .
ReplyDeleteI loved reading and learning from this post. I know a bit about wetas but haven't heard of Tawa
ReplyDeleteI'm ashamed of how little I know . . . 😧
DeleteNever heard of either of those words. Also, no thanks sticky, legged, grasshopper...I'm not holding that.
ReplyDeleteGrasshoppers always hop away too fast . . .
DeleteThat Weta is a bit creepy. I would hate to come across a bug that big
ReplyDeleteI agree, but I guess one gets used to them . . . 😧
DeleteYour comment about paneer is funny, because an Indian friend was visiting me recently when I'd made that soft cheese. She said oh, I know it, it's American paneer!
ReplyDeleteIts origins are somewhat shrouded in mystery, it seems. No matter, it's tasty.
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I would NOT like to meet that bug!
ReplyDeleteIts looks are against it!
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ReplyDeleteA fun geography lesson today. Except the bug.
ReplyDeleteThe bug gains in interest what it loses in looks . . . maybe.
DeleteThat is one big weta!
ReplyDeleteIt is. It's not something I want to get too close to, really, but there's no chance of that.
DeleteI again learned something new, but the insect or whatever it is, maybe useful, but looks horrible !
ReplyDeleteIt's not attractive, it's true!
ReplyDeleteI could do without ever seeing a weta.
ReplyDeleteFortunately for you, they don't live in your neck of the woods.
DeleteInteresting-Christine cmlk79.blogspot.com
ReplyDeleteThank you.
DeleteI enjoy learning so many new words here. Much better than searching the dictionary for them..
ReplyDeleteI do sometimes peruse the dictionary, too.
DeleteSorry, but I don't like the look of the Weta!
ReplyDeleteAn interesting post though.
All the best Jan
Not a pretty beast.
DeleteWhy on earth would anyone want to eat fruit that tastes like turpentine?
ReplyDeleteMy thoughts precisely.
DeleteI, apparently, need to educate myself a bit more about the weta as from its description (eats fruits and leaves) and it looks, I'm not sure it is necessarily a "bad" thing that it is endangered??? (New Zealanders and more-educated folk than me: Please don't beat me up for my ignorance in the comments...I promise I will go do a bit of research and try to understand why they are not locust/grasshopper-ish.)
ReplyDeleteI'm sure there are people who have made it their life's work to study the weta and its friends and relations. There's always more to discover. 😟😀
DeleteFascinating read, thanks so much!
ReplyDelete😀
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