In recent times, the air temperature in my village seems to be around 30˚-35˚C. It rarely rains so there is no stagnant water in the yard. Because of this, perhaps, some Sesame plants appear to thrive, even though they are not among the cultivated plants. The tubular or bell-shaped flowers of Sesamum indicum look soft, have fine hairs, and are pale purple in color.
The capsule-shaped pods appear in tiers below the flower, and it is like dividing for each pod, one leaf, or for each leaf, one pod. In each tier, there are usually three pods and three leaves.
This plant is going to give us something like this, and also its seed oil.
Near the Sesame plant, grows and propagates a member of the Cucurbitaceae family. However, I have not been able to access information about this type. This is different from other kinds of cucumbers.