GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   Australia (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/australia/)
-   -   ID of ?edible pea (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/australia/98966-re-id-edible-pea.html)

John Savage 23-07-2005 11:37 PM

ID of ?edible pea
 
Richard Wright writes:
Can anybody give me an ID on this pea?

http://box.net/public/richwrig/dfiles/ClimbingPea.jpg


Interesting. My browser (Arachne) said the file was not any format it
recognized, so I downloaded the file to take a closer look. I tried a
DOS viewer ("Picture Viewer") on it and nothing was displayed apart from a
message that the file was a damaged jpeg file. So I tried another viewer
(dvpeg) and this time the photo was displayed with no problems. So it seems
that there is something non-standard about your photo conversion.

It grows in late winter/early spring (Sydney, Australia) as a climber
up to 3 m (10 feet).

The pods, which are reasonably sweet and tasty, have a peculiar
appearance of being closed by a purplish zipper.

The location is on the edge of a communal vegetable garden but none of
the community is ever there when I pass by.


Pin a note with your question to the plant, along with your phone number
and a 20c coin.

I've added in aus.gardens to canvass local knowledge. Hope that's okay.
--
John Savage (my news address is not valid for email)


Richard Wright 24-07-2005 09:18 PM

On Sat, 23 Jul 2005 22:37:53 GMT, John Savage
wrote:

Richard Wright writes:
Can anybody give me an ID on this pea?

http://box.net/public/richwrig/dfiles/ClimbingPea.jpg


Interesting. My browser (Arachne) said the file was not any format it
recognized, so I downloaded the file to take a closer look. I tried a
DOS viewer ("Picture Viewer") on it and nothing was displayed apart from a
message that the file was a damaged jpeg file. So I tried another viewer
(dvpeg) and this time the photo was displayed with no problems. So it seems
that there is something non-standard about your photo conversion.

It grows in late winter/early spring (Sydney, Australia) as a climber
up to 3 m (10 feet).

The pods, which are reasonably sweet and tasty, have a peculiar
appearance of being closed by a purplish zipper.

The location is on the edge of a communal vegetable garden but none of
the community is ever there when I pass by.


Pin a note with your question to the plant, along with your phone number
and a 20c coin.

I've added in aus.gardens to canvass local knowledge. Hope that's okay.


Thanks John. I got the info from the group that this is Dolichos
lablab (Lablab bean).

http://www.floridata.com/ref/D/doli_lab.cfm

Your experience with the image got me a bit worried. Before posting I
had reduced it in size by IrfanView. Now I have downloaded to see if I
have problems. Can open it in IrfanView, in Microsoft Photo Editor and
can import into CorelDraw 9. Have never previously had complaints
about JPEGs saved with IrfanView.





All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:07 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter