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Fundación Loros
A Black Olive Born Alone in Red Earth

Sunday, March 29, 2026· 10.4399, -75.2576

A Black Olive Born Alone in Red Earth

By George


In a corner of Los Montes de María, amid low shrubs and an open blue sky, Jorge Alcalá and Michel Salas stopped before something they hadn't expected to find: a young individual of Capparidastrum frondosum — the olivo negro — pushing up alone from the dry, rust-colored soil, unplanted by any human hand. Its large, glossy leaves stood in sharp contrast to the parched earth and creeping vegetation around it, as though the plant had simply decided, on its own terms, to take root here. What makes this discovery remarkable is twofold. On one hand, it is natural regeneration in a tropical dry forest — an ecosystem where every self-seeded plant counts. On the other, the olivo negro is no ordinary species to the people of this region: it is known locally as "contra," holding a place in the surrounding tradition that reaches well beyond the botanical. That story — of a tree that rises unaided from difficult ground and that neighbors recognize by name — is precisely the kind of sign Jorge and Michel came here to document.

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