A Drunken Tree

Collected by Isabel Balducci from the Eastern Toba people of Gran Chaco, Argentina. So named because of its swollen water-storing trunk, the "drunken tree" (palo borracho in Spanish) is widely known in subtropical parts of South America. The scientific name of the white-flowered species is Chorisia insignis. In North America it is often called the "White Silk Floss Tree" because of its large oval seed pods that split open when ripe to expose a fluffy mass of silky fibers.

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Step-by-Step Video Clips
Written Instructions

          
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Step 3 - Mouth, through the inverted triangle, bites the the central segment of 5f, and returns through the inverted triangle.

5 releases its loop, then 5, over intervening strings, removes the mouth loop from above.