Bella’s
Seeds
October 13th, 2009 by Isabella
Sofia is a city of people. People
live in apartments that are drab gray blocks of cement. Trains rumble by on
iron tracks, and people look out of the windows and talk in Bulgarian. Dull
black wires bring electricity to people.
Sofia is also a city of trees. Brown
tree trunks line the streets like hundreds of statues. Leaves with all the
colors of the rainbow float down to cover the sidewalks like a warm blanket.
Chestnuts in a spiky cover hang on chestnut trees ready to fall.
As I wandered in Sofia, I noticed
that the trees were full of seeds; big and little, circle and oval, they all
scattered far from the parent tree. I saw crazy teenagers throwing chestnuts at
bikes and trains. A maple seed with curved wings fluttered to the ground like a
spinning parachute, and I picked it up. I split the seed open and put it on my
nose so I looked like a rhino! Cruz did the same with papa’s help.
As I stood beneath a mighty walnut
tree, I spied a dry walnut (stored by a lucky squirrel) hidden in a knot-hole.
I reached up, standing on papa’s shoulders. I heard the “chip! chip!” of a squirrel chattering at us!
After that we said, “Sorry for
taking your lunch, but thank you!” Oak trees were raining acorns, and squirrels
were leaping and dancing as they gathered them up. I saw seeds in pods, cotton,
purple fruit, spiky shells, berries, parachutes, and flat banana pods.
Everywhere I looked there were seeds.
Trees are living things. They get
minerals and water from the ground through their roots. They use energy from
the sun to turn carbon dioxide and water into sugar. This happens in the
leaves, and it is called photosynthesis. Trees grow and then reproduce. When
their flowers are pollinated they grow seeds. Seeds are baby trees with
food and nutrients so they can start to grow. They need enough food to live
until they grow leaves and roots.
Seeds are made in all different
shapes to help them disperse. Disperse means move away from the parent tree. If
seeds did not disperse, when they grew they would be all crammed together, and
they would have to fight for minerals, light, and water. Trees can’t move.
Trees depend on other things to move the seeds like animals, people, gravity,
and the wind. Some even get moved by the sun! When their pods dry up their
seeds burst out of them like a spring had pushed them out. Seeds can even be
dispersed by a wild teenager chucking chestnuts at trains!
For my project I took a lot of time
to observe seeds. I threw seeds up in the air to see how they moved. I
collected as many different types of seeds as I could and took them home to
observe them. I drew their outside appearance then cut them open and drew their
inside appearance. I drew details like color and texture. I described each seed
in words. I read about seeds on the internet and saw a lot with my own eyes. On
the internet I learned that poppies have very small seeds. The top of the poppy
is like a rattle with really small holes. When the wind blows the poppy around,
the rattle shakes, and poppy seeds go flying out. The
whole seed experience was a lot of fun, especially standing on papa’s shoulders
to get the dried walnut out of the tree.
As part of my project, papa
and I made Baklava out of walnuts. Baklava is a great tasting desert
that is made in Bulgaria. We made it because it has a lot of seeds. Walnuts are
the seeds of walnut trees. The sheets of phylo
dough are made from the seeds of wheat, which is a grass. Here’s the
recipe that we used. It is best to eat it with ice cream!