Document information
Physical location:
RB MSS M76, Library, Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne. 82.10.02Preferred Citation:
John Thurston to Ferdinand von Mueller, 1882-10-02. R.W. Home, Thomas A. Darragh, A.M. Lucas, Sara Maroske, D.M. Sinkora, J.H. Voigt and Monika Wells (eds), Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller, <https://vmcp.rbg.vic.gov.au/id/82-10-02>, accessed September 11, 2025
Suva Fiji
2[d] October 1882
My dear Sir,
I have to thank you very much for your several kind letters
and interesting enclosures all of which reached me safely and would have been acknowledged
before but for an event which I think I may predict will not happen again.
1
Letters not found.
We have just removed the seat of Government and all the Staff of offices from Levuka
in the island of Ovalau to the Port of Suva in Viti Levu. The worry and difficulty,
and the dislocation of all our habits of routine are things I cannot describe to you.
Directly that I have settled down in my new abode I will make attempts to secure the
male amentum of the Cycas. I observe they grow in my neighbourhood but whether the
oval or round seeded variety I have not yet had time to ascertain. One that I saw
the other day was certainly 35 feet high — but I intend measuring it.
The large bananas — "Soanka" in the Fijian such as I sent you some time since per
s.s. 'Suva' are of three or four varieties. The one ordinarily seen is erect, with
bright red fruit about 3 inches long. The very large varieties are only found in the
depth of the unfrequented forests
Of these there are two sorts — the one I sent you — and another in which the fruit
is nearly as round and as large as a coconut. I am planting each sort in my garden
to observe their peculiarities more closely —
Your suggestion to send a good sized Cycas to Kew shall be carried into effect, but
I fear that if it arrived in England at the beginning or middle of winter it would
perhaps die —
I am in frequent correspondence with Mr Thiselton Dyer, in fact almost every Mail,
and never lose an opportunity of sending him plants which I think may be of interest
and as a rule my cases reach England in splendid condition
Mr Weber
has quite recovered from the effects of his rough treatment in Samoa — I believe that
he has left for Germany but am not sure — He was not a pleasing young gentleman. I
gave him free passage all over the group in Government vessels, store room for his
boxes & collection — free quarters at several places which he visited, and did everything
I could to help a young Botanist who I sensed was not overburdened with money But
he never showed me a single thing that he collected, nor said 'thank you' for the trouble I had taken about him In short
he seemed to consider himself injured because I was not disposed to pay all his expenses
while in Fiji
2
Theodor Weber, representative of Cesar Godeffroy & Sons in Samoa? See Davidson (1967),
p. 46.
There are two Casuarinas in Fiji 'Equisetifolia' and 'nodosa'
I know of no others
3
C. nodosa
not in
IPNI (accessed 22 August 2019). Mid-to-late-nineteenth century literature on French Polynesia identifies the tree
commonly known as ‘le bois de fer’ with
Casuarina
and, in a small number of cases, for example Gaffarel (1880), p. 404, as
Casuarina nodosa.
I got a new variety of "Da[ckua]" the other day so far as the cone went and it is
the most perfect cone I have found in the Tropics. A native brought it out of the
bush with him but without leaves or other parts — I send it to you — By & bye you
shall have leaves & flowers
Faithfully yours
John B. Thurston
Casuarina Equisetifolia
Casuarina nodosa
Cycas