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Bunch Of Bananas ~ 365 Photos Challenge #13

Bananas, just a bunch of bananas! Waiting for the time until it’s ripe to be picked. Do you believe that the tree of this fruit can cause be a big problem in my neighborhood?

In my area, and in West Java in general, the traditional community marks the location of their property with a living milestone, aka a tree. Yes, a tree. If the overlay changes because it is sold or shared as an inheritance, new pegs are plugged in; New trees are planted in every corner, depending on the shape and size of the property.

In some cases, there are parties who deliberately misbehave by planting banana trees as borders. You know, in a few moments, that the limit has shifted and the banana grower takes advantage by claiming the boundary of the land is the outermost banana tree from the tree collection. Then, the dispute and the commotion ensued. So also with the tree from this banana before. Before this area was finally abandoned.

In this life, there are always people with such fraudulent intentions. May we always be wary of such things, even more so if such manipulative claim involves the sensation of romance. Ughhh…

Anyone can join in on this fun photo challenge which was started by John artbytes26 . Just please be sure to check out Art’s rules and guidelines for the challenge in this post 365 Photos Challenge.

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What do you think?

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57 Comments

  1. Well, but banana is not a tree and therefore should not qualify as marker hahaha! I always wonder about the trait of greed in humans…people kill each other for the sake of land and borders. And yet, no one really owned it in the beginning of times. Mankind come out of this realm and just started grabbing everything and claiming ownership. A pity, really, knowing we will all leave it behind and the death always triumphs in the end. Tsk.

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  2. The tree and the bananas are great. I do not like the way some people want to manipulate others. Why is this greed. People are leaving the land as they have come – nothing.

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    • Thank you for your compliment for the bananas, my dear friend Elenka. About greedy… Hmmm… After read some comments I aware that everywhere the same thing under any law such things are always the case. Thank you

  3. Very interesting post! Unfortunately, you can find people like this anywhere.
    However, I love bananas. I’ve seen banana trees at the seaside here in Bulgaria, but I’ve never seen fruits on them.

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  4. Wonderful banana photograph, lots of healthy looking fruit. I have a banana tree, I think only “Ladies fingers” we are cooler than the tropics they can grow but this next year 2018 will be my 3rd attempt.

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      • “Ladies fingers”, are small bananas. Australian bananas taste great, all NZ bananas are imported. I don’t understand why we don’t get Australian bananas.Apparently Australians aren’t allowed to grow a banana tree they are only allowed to grow “Ladies fingers” Completely irrational to me.!

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        • I am confused now. Australian bananas taste great, but Australians are not allowed to grow Ladies fingers. How do we know that Australian bananas are delicious if no bananas are produced by Australia? And is not Ladies fingers one kind of banana?

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          • Once I was in Sydney Australia, I ate their bananas and thought they were better than the bananas that are sold in New Zealand. Yet, the Australians don’t export their bananas to New Zealand.

            Then a friend of mine lived in Australia,, learnt that most people were not allowed to grow a banana tree, but small bananas that tree which is called “Ladies fingers”.You are only allowed to grow banana trees in Australia if you have a banana plantation

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    • Yes, Kim. That’s what happened in my place. Some societies have adapted to the changing times, especially the developing regions that have acquired immigrants from outside while others retain them, especially those who uphold the values of local wisdom.

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  5. I suspect if the US hadn’t had a surveyor as a founding father (George Washington) we would have a similar problem.

    I bet it drives you bananas dealing with it 🙂

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          • Depending on what state you live in here, the same holds true. Although it is a bit harder to do. You can squat on property, live on it without owning it, even on others property. The land owners can have a hard time evicting them. Also If you find property that the taxes are behind in, you can squat, pay the taxes and after an amount of time, I think it is about five years in most states, and that land becomes yours.

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          • There is one tribe, who generally can not see an empty land, even when they come as new migrants in a metropolitan city like Jakarta. They will occupy and master it, without any permit. If landowners know too late, they will not be willing to leave, they will say, “Man has nothing, and this land belongs to God, so I can also use this empty land!”. Not that it can not be resolved legally, but settling through legal channels is not something that does not cost, especially in Jakarta.

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