Life in Newburgh on Ythan

By Talpa

My first mango

Mrs Talpa was shopping this morning and came back with a selection of fruit and vegetables from across the world; tatties frae Scotland, carrots from England, pears from South Africa, grapes from Chile, wine from France, blueberries from Poland, bananas from Trinidad and a mango from Jamaica. We take this rich and diverse worldwide harvest so much for granted these days, but it wasn't always so.

I well remember seeing, and eating, my very first mango. It was 1970 and we had just moved into our house in Suva, in the Fijis. In the garden was a gnarled old tree which was simply hanging with a multitude of mangoes. (Worth a King's ransom at the price Tesco charges!) There were also coconut palms, sugar cane, and pawpaws. We had truly arrived in Paradise.

So, in celebration of that happy day I present you with a mango sitting on a rather special Fijian wooden dish, known as a daveniyaqona vakaga.

The Wesleyan missionary the Rev. Thomas Williams, was the principal authority upon the state of society among the Fijians when Europeans first came into contact with them. With his wife and a few other dedicated colleagues he conducted his ministry in the considerable hardship and danger of the cannibal islands of Fiji between 1840 and 1852. He described his experiences in Fiji and the Fijians: The Islands and their inhabitants. published in 1858. In the book he illustrated a dish of similar style and described it as a priest's inspirational yaqona dish in duck form, in Fijian a daveniyaqona vakaga, used within the Spirit Temple. Yaqona, a mildly narcotic brew made from the plant Piper methysticum was drunk from the dish by the bete, the priest, via a straw.

The location map shows the very spot where I saw my first mango.

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