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The Uvita Mocosa in Two Acts

Sunday, March 29, 2026

The Uvita Mocosa in Two Acts

By Michel Salas


On the Loma del Alcón, Michel Salas and Jorge Alcalá came across a Cordia dentata doing what few trees allow themselves to do at the same time: flowering and fruiting at once. The uvita mocosa, as it is known along these trails, wore two moments of its life on the same branches — tight green fruits clustered together, gleaming under the March sun, and others already further along, carrying that white-cream hue that signals ripeness, hanging loosely among the leaves. The clear blue sky of that Sunday made for a fine contrast with the greens of the sector, and the tree seemed indifferent to any observer, unhurried in its phenology. There was no fauna that day — no birds, no insects recorded — only the plant going about its business, and two researchers attentive enough to document it. The photographs captured both states with clarity: the green promise of the immature clusters and the pale fruit that had already traveled some distance along its path. Let it be noted in the logbook: the Loma del Alcón has its Cordia dentata in full swing, and Michel and Jorge were there to witness it.
The Uvita Mocosa in Two Acts · 2