I’ve just returned from a trip to southern India where one of the most amusing incidents was being taken to Banana Street, a narrow alleyway that led off the main fruit and vegetable market in Madurai.
The 40 or so stalls that lined both sides of this little thoroughfare only sold bananas and the guide said very proudly, there were 16 varieties on sale all grown locally.
I love bananas but I’d have been hard-pressed too distinguish more than 3 or 4 different sorts on display and none of them were that much like the ones we in Britain see on our supermarket or greengrocers shelves.
So of course I had to find out more about bananas and their history if not in our gardens then at least in our conservatories and supermarket shelves…






Choosing a successful wedding present can often be difficult but in 1816 the British government made a pretty good guess. Princess Charlotte, George IV’s only child and the heir to the throne was to be married to Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, an impoverished minor German princeling she had met and chosen for herself over her father’s preferred candidate. According to Charlotte, Leopold expressed a wish for “a large place and a house in the country where he can farm, shoot and hunt etc a day’s journey from town.” 


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