Page 321 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 321

284                TRAVELS IN OMAN.                     [CH.


                                    dicinal properties are attributed to the bark
                                    of the .Acacia Arabica. The wood is also made

                                    into agricultural implements, the stocks of
                                    matchlocks, and other articles requiring ex­

                                    cessive hardness. No timber fit for building
                                    is found in Oman, the trunk of the date-
                                    palm, commonly used in erecting their houses,

                                    scarcely deserving that appellation, since it is
                                    weak, and very soon decays.

                                       Tarfa, or tamarisk bushes (Tamarin Ori-
                                    entalis) are numerous. Camels feed greedily
                                    on their tender branches and leaves, which

                                    the Bedowins collect by beating the trees
                                    with sticks, and receiving what falls upon a

                                    cloth spread beneath them. On the Jebel
                                    Akhdar there are, as I have noticed in the

                                    course of the Narrative, many indigenous trees
                                    not found in the plains. In some of the chan­

                                    nels through which water has passed, lofty
                                    tamarind, nebek {Lotus Nebea), and hithel

                                    trees have taken root, notwithstanding the
                                    rocky nature of their bed; but, generally

                                    speaking, the summits and slopes of the
                                    mountains are unwooded and barren. Ta­
                                    marind trees also grow most luxuriantly on

                                    some of the plains. They are large, wide-
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