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`The Carob Tree
(teratsia in the Cypriot dialect from the Greek kerátiοn (κεράτιον), “fruit of the carob” (from keras
[κέρας] "horn")
• Botanical Name: Ceratonia siliqua • Family: Leguminosae • Genus: Ceratonia • Common Names: Carob, St John's Bread, Locust,
Locust Bean, Black Gold
The Carob Tree is a member of the Pea Family (Leguminosae or Fabaceae). A few of its many family members are sweet peas, peanuts, soy beans and garden peas.
Carob tree
• The carob grows slowly during the first year (50 mg/liter monthly, or 25 mg/liter semi-monthly) for 5 months.
• It is necessary to cut back the taproot 6 months before transferring to the field if the plant is not grown by the tube/post-hole method.
• Large trees cannot be successfully
transplanted. • It grows to a height of about 50 to 60
feet (15 to 17 metres)
• The Carob Tree begins to produce fruit when it is 6 to 15 years old. It can live and produce
fruit until it is 100 years old.
• The carob tree has been grown since
antiquity in most countries of the
Mediterranean basin, usually in mild and
dry places with poor soils. Its value was
recognized by the ancient Greeks, who
brought it from its native Middle East to
Greece and Italy and by the Arabs, who
disseminated it along the North African
coast and north into Spain and Portugal.
• It was spread in recent times to other Mediterranean-like regions such as California, Arizona, Mexico, Chile and Argentina by Spanish, to parts of Australia by Mediterranean emigrants and to South Africa and India by the English.
• The carob tree is an important component of
the Mediterranean vegetation and its
cultivation in marginal and prevailing
calcareous soils of the Mediterranean region
is important environmentally and
economically.
• Traditionally, grafted carob trees have
been interplanted with olives, grapes,
almonds and barley in low-intensity
farming systems in most producing
countries.
• Carob flowers - The carob flowers are produced from older stems
Flowers are green-tinted red
• The pods must be harvested before winter rains. They are shaken down by means of a long pole with a terminal hook to grasp the branches.
• Mature carob bean is from 10 to 20 centimeters long. It is a dark brown colour when dry. The flesh of the bean is eaten by most farm animals.
Fig. 2. Important parts of the carob pod (A), section of pod (B) and seed (C).
• As a food source, carob pods could be stored and transported long distances. In most of the Mediterranean region wild and naturalized carobs are distributed in more or less the same geographic and climatic belt as the cultivated.
• Forms of spontaneous carobs are particularly common at low altitudes along the Spanish Mediterranean coast, southwest Spain, southern Portugal, the Balearic Islands, southeast France, the shores of southern Italy including Sicily, the Adriatic coast of Croatia, the Aegean region and Crete in Greece and Turkey, along the northern and southern ranges of the isle of Cyprus, in the islands of Malta, in the maritime belt of Lebanon and Israel, the north and south of Morocco and the coastline in Tunisia.
The end