Toots or white fruits of the female mulberry tree. They also come in dark purple or black and red. Some fruits can be up to four inches long. |
If it so happens that you agree with me, I was wondering if I
could petition you (knowing your clout and authority) to tell Clark County to
reverse the ban, or at least revise it, allowing Las Vegans to raise them with
the simple requirement that they plant it in their backyards, away from public
walkways. I really feel no child should be deprived of the learning experience
and the benefits of watching the berries evolve from flowers to delicious
fruits which taste of gummy bears. Why something so good, or something which
provides so much despite needing so little should be banned is just wrong.
Mulberry catkins or flowers of the male mulberry tree. These flowers only produce pollen, no fruit. |
I have been taking lots of cuttings from a feral mulberry bush
by Tropicana Ave, but so far, no luck in getting any to root. Still hoping I
could successfully clone it before the property owner or the 'plant
authorities' remove it, hahaha.
As always, thanks so much for your time.
A. It is my understanding that only the male mulberry (thus fruitless) has an ordinance against it, not the female (fruited). Mulberry trees can be either male or female; the male tree produces the pollen from its male flowers while the female tree produces fruit which can stain (the red and black ones and admittedly in my opinion the better tasting ones compared to the white one).
Mulberry is an example of plants we call dioecious. Humans are dioecious; we have separate people who are male and others that are female. Mulberry is similar to humans in this regard. I know the botanists in the crowd will have trouble with my definition.
The staining can be pretty bad when the fruits from the female trees drop on your car, patio or sidewalk and the birds absolutely go nuts over the fruit. The fruit would be coming in about now in our climate. the county ordinance is concerning the pollen and associated allergies of the MALE tree, not the female.
By the way, in many central Asian (Afghanistan) and Indo European countries (Armenia) they share the same name for the fruits - toots.
A. It is my understanding that only the male mulberry (thus fruitless) has an ordinance against it, not the female (fruited). Mulberry trees can be either male or female; the male tree produces the pollen from its male flowers while the female tree produces fruit which can stain (the red and black ones and admittedly in my opinion the better tasting ones compared to the white one).
Mulberry is an example of plants we call dioecious. Humans are dioecious; we have separate people who are male and others that are female. Mulberry is similar to humans in this regard. I know the botanists in the crowd will have trouble with my definition.
Fruitless or male mulberry tree in bloom and releasing allergenic pollen in Clark County, Nevada. |
By the way, in many central Asian (Afghanistan) and Indo European countries (Armenia) they share the same name for the fruits - toots.