Friday 12 July 2019

life in a Oasis Morocco

                                    An oasis is a fertile area in an arid or deserted area



      The year begins with pruning of the palms in January February, followed by pollination of the dates in March-April for a harvest in September and October. (usfel )
   In terms of its environment, it is the result not only of a rich biodiversity, but also of a population that has been able to preserve an ancestral know-how, in line with the principle of sustainable development, which is today weakened by global warming and desertification.
It all begins with the water necessary for all life. The oasis, marked by a very low rainfall, must drain the water in its bosom to survive and thrive. It is by recovering and channelling the waters of the Atlas through long underground galleries stretching over several tens of kilometers, called khettaras, and by the water contained in the shallow groundwater that man has succeeded this prodigious turn of hand.
The water collected is redistributed through crops through a drip irrigation system, some of them, or through irrigation canals called seguias. These systems make it possible to distribute water equitably across the oasis according to well-defined rules

Ecosystem linchpin of the oasis: the date palm tree

This tree of warm regions whose single stem ends in a bouquet of palm leaves orchestrates the organization of oases and Ouadi.

The female plants give the fruit so much appreciated while the male gives the pollen necessary for fertilization which is made by the hand of man. Nothing gets lost in a date palm tree, besides the delicious dates that are eaten all year round, the palms are recovered for basketry and the making of terrace furniture, for roofs and animal litter.
The trunk, called the stipe, is used to make roof frames, furniture or doors. The trunk fibres will be used to make ropes. In Morocco, the heritage of a single Jewish know-how allows the production of the famous Merriah, a brandy made from the distillation of dates or figs.
For several decades now, a scourge has been ruining the economy of oases: bayoud. It is a microscopic fungus that enters through the roots and slowly ascends to the heart of the palm trees. After a year, the palm tree dies not without contaminating its neighbours. The only solution to prevent any spread is to burn the sick palm tree. The palms, which can rise to more than twenty metres, provide the shade necessary for fruit trees and crops to develop


Cactus Opuntia, prickly pears

It is one of the most promising plant species in drylands.
Its fruits are widely consumed locally and, like date palms, are a popular source of income. Fruit is also used as a food colouring agent and cosmetic use tends to catch up with dietary practice.
An oil is extracted by cold mechanical pressure from the seeds of figs. It is particularly rich in fatty acids and vitamins E. It still takes several hundred kilos of fruit to produce one litre of this precious liquid. Snowshoes produce a protein-rich feed supplement for cattl
.

The living world of the oasis

In this fertile microcosm in the heart of a sand or stone desert, it is a whole world that populates the oasis.
Between herding and transhumance, breeding is also an essential component of the oasis environment. Sheep and ewes supply meat, milk and wool for weaving; mules and donkeys carry out forced labour for water, transport and agricultural work. Together, they guarantee soil fertility through the production of manure necessary for oasis agriculture.

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