Re: Did native Americans cultivate Lime tree?

From: Horace LaBadie (hwlabadiejr_at_nospam.highstream.net)
Date: 01/29/05


Date: Sat, 29 Jan 2005 18:03:19 -0500

In article <ctgv3e$pnc$1@kermit.esat.net>, "JMB" <jmb@utvinternet.ie>
wrote:

> "Tom McDonald" <tmcdonald2672@nohormelcharter.net> wrote in message
> news:sDAKd.18231$iG1.17203@fe03.lga...

SNIP

> > John,
> >
> > This is a link to a searchable English translation of the "Resa". It is in
> > two volumes, although you are right that the original was three volumes.
>
> Yep. I assume that Inger is reading the Swedish version (in three volumes),
> although the fact that she is claiming that she is actually reading the
> fourth volume from the three volume set makes me a little suspicious.
>
> >
> > http://tinyurl.com/5o9t2
> >
> > I searched through both for "lime tree", "lime", and lime tree. I found
> > nothing like what Inger wrote. There was one mention of lime and some
> > other trees well-spaced apart from each other; but there was nothing like
> > rows mentioned.
>
> She has since given an ISBN (951-9018-43-3), and when a search is done, this
> page comes up:
> http://www.genealogia.fi/kauppa/kirja529.htm
> I'm too tired to try translating what the page actually says (given that for
> me to do it, I'd have to look up about 90% of the words in a dictionary!)
> but I'm not so sure that it is volume four of the 3 volume set for some
> reason.

Try http://www.routledge-ny.com/ref/travellit/azentriesl2.html

It appears that it is the diary notes that are four volumes.

HWL