Summary[edit] Description: English: Thiakry, an adaptive recipe with steamed, rolled millet flour pellets (called araw/arraw in Wolof) as the base, pictured here blended with butter, mixed with sweet raisins and grated fresh coconut, then combined with sweetened yoghurt or other sweetened fermented milk ('sow' in Wolof or lait caillé in French). Paired here with popular kinkeliba tea served hot. Kinkeliba tea is steeped from the dried leaves of the Combretum micranthum shrub, sugared or not to taste, either plain or with milk. Very popular, affordable and nutritious meal or dessert in Senegal. Served in colorful, popular, inexpensive plastic bowl and cup manufactured in Senegal. : This is an image of food from Senegal. Date: 17 November 2014. Source: Own work. Author: T.K. Naliaka.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Wood of a Red bushwillow showing heartwood and sapwood. It was cut to clear the verge of a bush track near Phakama private lodge in Dinokeng Game Reserve, Limpopo. Date: 8 November 2015, 12:22. Source: Own work. Author: JMK.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Ripe samaras of Combretum mkuzense in the Manie van der Schijff Botanical Garden, Pretoria. Date: 22 November 2015, 15:25:28. Source: Own work. Author: JMK.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Fruit of Combretum erythrophyllum at the Rietspruit, near Uitspan, Skrikfontein. Date: 18 March 2021. Source: Own work. Author: JMK.
Summary[edit] Description: Combretum edwardsii Afrikaans: Loof van 'n Bosklimop te Glenthorp-plantasie naby Nelshoogte, Mpumalanga, Suid-Afrika English: Foliage of a Forest climbing bushwillow at Glenthorp plantation near Nelshoogte, Mpumalanga, South Africa. Date: October 2000. Source: Own work. Author: JMK.
Summary[edit] Description: Common name: Escova-de-Macaco, Monkey's brush Botanical name: Combretum rotundifolium - [ (kom-BREE-tum) latin name for a climbing plant of another genus; (ro-tun-dih-FOH-lee-um) round leaf ] Synonym: Combretum aubletii Family: Combretaceae (rangoon creeper family) Origin: S. America Combretaceae is a family of flowering plants. The family includes about 600 species of trees, shrubs, and lianas in 20 genera. The family includes the Leadwood tree, Combretum imberbe. Three genera, Conocarpus, Laguncularia and Lumnitzera, grow in mangrove habitats. Combretaceae are widespread in the subtropics and tropics. Some members of this family produce useful construction timber, including idigbo (from Terminalia ivorensis). Courtesy: - Top Tropicals - Dave's Garden - From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Note: Identification attempted; may not be accurate. Date: 28 January 2007, 16:19. Source: Escova-de-Macaco. Author: Dinesh Valke from Thane, India. Camera location18° 57′ 22.45″ N, 72° 48′ 16.84″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 18.956237; 72.804679.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Foliage of a Velvet bushwillow in Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden in western Roodepoort, South Africa. Date: 16 February 2013, 17:09. Source: Own work. Author: JMK.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Habit of a Leadwood at Zinyathi lodge, Steenbokpan, Limpopo. Date: 2 May 2015, 07:35. Source: Own work. Author: JMK.
Kampung Beting, Kuala Pilah, Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia.Specimen growing wild in a thicket mixed with other vegetations. Combretum indicum (L.) DeFilipps syn. Quisqualis indica L. Combretaceae. CN: [Malay - Akar dani, Akar cucur atap, Akar setanduk], Chinese honeysuckle, Rangoon creeper. Creeper is found in thickets or secondary forests of the Philippines, India and Malaysia. It has since been cultivated and naturalized in tropical areas. The plant is mainly used for traditional medicine. Decoctions of the root, seed or fruit can be used as antihelmintic to expel parasitic worms or for alleviating diarrhea. Fruit decoction can also be used for gargling. The fruits are also used to combat nephritis. Leaves can be used to relieve pain caused by fever. The roots are used to treat rheumatism. Synonym/s:Quisqualis indica L.Ref and suggested reading:www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/taxon.pl?412158en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quisqualis_indica
Description: Combretum aculeatum at Mahangu NP, Namibia. Date: 2008. Source: Own work. Author: Marco Schmidt[1]. Permission(Reusing this file): cc-by-sa 3.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Dried Kinkeliba leaves of the shrub Combretum micranthum used to brew the traditional and popular Senegalese kinkeliba drink are sold roadside bundled in the traditional manner or now available in plastic sacks. : This is an image of food from Senegal. Date: 24 November 2014. Source: Own work. Author: T.K. Naliaka.
Summary[edit] Description: Afrikaans: Groeivorm van 'n Rooiboswilg te Zinyathi-jagkamp, Limpopo, op 'n substraat van rooi kalaharisand English: Habit of a Red bushwillow at Zinyathi lodge, Steenbokpan, Limpopo, growing on a substrate of red kalahari sand. Date: 3 May 2015, 09:02. Source: Own work. Author: JMK.