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  <title>[filter] Australian electronic music, arts, media, project listings</title>
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  <updated>2009-04-30T02:31:06+01:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>summertime mangoes</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.aliak.com/content/summertime-mangoes" />
    <id>http://www.aliak.com/content/summertime-mangoes</id>
    <published>2009-04-30T02:29:55+01:00</published>
    <updated>2009-04-30T02:31:06+01:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>AliaK</name>
    </author>
    <category term="blog entry" />
    <category term="blog entry" />
    <category term="bowen" />
    <category term="brisbane" />
    <category term="memories" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Inder Salim on reader-l posted about <a href="http://indersalim.livejournal.com/59991.html" rel="nofollow" rel="nofollow">The Mango Tree</a> in his community. some people in his block of flats have 'claimed' the fruit from the tree as their own, and he comments about the validity of this.<br />
at the end of the article, Inder asks, <b>"So  has anybody tasted a real mango, if there is one, and if yes, who deserves to eat that, and relish?"</b>. I've taken his question as literal and replied with the below post. I didn't comment on the issues that are also mentioned in the article - about people in his community living well together and sharing the fruit of the common tree - breaking down the community social control structures, or regarding some of the children who may not have eaten a mango. on the reader-l, a couple of people commented on some of his terms, calling them racist.<br />
hi Inder, my mango eating experience is also from Australia similar to</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Inder Salim on reader-l posted about <a href="http://indersalim.livejournal.com/59991.html" rel="nofollow">The Mango Tree</a> in his community. some people in his block of flats have 'claimed' the fruit from the tree as their own, and he comments about the validity of this.</p>
<p>at the end of the article, Inder asks, <b>"So  has anybody tasted a real mango, if there is one, and if yes, who deserves to eat that, and relish?"</b>. I've taken his question as literal and replied with the below post. I didn't comment on the issues that are also mentioned in the article - about people in his community living well together and sharing the fruit of the common tree - breaking down the community social control structures, or regarding some of the children who may not have eaten a mango. on the reader-l, a couple of people commented on some of his terms, calling them racist.</p>
<p>hi Inder, my mango eating experience is also from Australia similar to<br />
Sophea's. mangoes are also grown in Queensland which is on the east<br />
coast of Australia, to the North - some of the best (imo) come from<br />
Bowen which is a town on the edge of the Whitsunday Islands. we had<br />
relatives living there, so in summer, when we were children we'd be<br />
sent a couple of cases of Bowen mangoes. this would be a real treat,<br />
and some of the other neighbourhood kids would come over to share in<br />
the treats. Mum would make us eat them outside in our togs (swimsuits)<br />
with the hose next to us as it was a really messy affair. we just<br />
peeled them and ate - they were very sweet, sometimes a little stringy<br />
towards the end. we'd end up with mango juice all over our faces and<br />
hands and have to hose ourselves off then run around in the sunshine.<br />
we didn't dice the mangoes or slice them into more manageable &amp; less<br />
messy pieces as people do these days - the mess was part of the fun.</p>
<p>and yes, I've also heard (in Brisbane) that if the fruit hangs over<br />
the fence into your yard or the footpath then you can pick the mango<br />
and eat it. no one seems to worry as there's usually an abundance of<br />
fruit which otherwise ends up falling off the trees to the ground and<br />
the birds eat them and go a little silly - they seem to become drunk<br />
on too many. the mango trees fruit in yards in Brisbane aren't as nice<br />
as the Bowen mangos though - I suppose they're a slightly different<br />
species? (not sure)</p>
<p>I had mangoes whilst in Delhi, and I was told they were famous in<br />
India (I forget which city - somewhere South?) but they didn't taste<br />
as sweet and juicy as the mangoes from my childhood. though memories<br />
have a way of doing that to something when you try it again later.<br />
plus I had them in a restaurant, and to me, that's just not the place<br />
/ way to eat mangoes properly!! you need to be out in the sunshine<br />
making a mess. :)</p>
<p>I hope your community can work out a way to share the mangoes and<br />
enjoy them in the summertime.<br />
kath</p>
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