Nice overcast sky today and the breeze wasn’t particularly strong so I went out to shoot milkweed. Milkweed is a favorite subject this time of year, it stands still and the variations in form, texture and luminosity go on and on.
Milkweed is valuable today as habitat for monarch butterflies. My wife reminded me of that and I expect I’ll be going back tomorrow to collect some seeds for our butterfly garden.
In 1944, in World War II, milkweed took on another kind of importance. The Japanese controlled what today is called Indonesia and that meant they had control of the kapok crop. Like milkweed, kapok produces a floss that was the main component in making flotation devices such as life jackets and life preservers. With a lot of the war fought on and over the seas, kapok, and its loss to the Allies, was very important.
Milkweed produces its own floss and it works about as well as kapok. Unfortunately milkweed was not a commercial crop and so people had to go out into the countryside to gather the seed pods before they burst open in the fall. With adults off to war or working in the factories, it was up to school children to gather this crop valuable to the war effort. I remember going out with my aunts and uncles (in junior high and high school) to gather them. I was five years old at the time. We knew it was important and a lot of work went into it. I have no idea how much we gathered. I do remember the large onion sacks bulging with milkweed pods. We were doing our part and I got a chance to do something important with the big kids.
It will likely rain tomorrow but I will probably go collect milkweed seeds anyway.
Pingback: An appreciation of milkweed « Spirit and Seeing