The legendary Garoe or 'Fountain Tree' was sacred to the Bimbaches, the early

inhabitants of El Hierro in the Canary Islands. The tree intercepted the rolling fog and

the water dripping from its leaves was collected and channeled off to provide drinking

water for the inhabitants.

 

The effect is most pronounced in Tenerife where the pine forests on Mount Teide

contribute at least three times more water by fog capture than is provided by rainfall.

 

"On Tuesday, July 22nd (1494), he departed for Jamaica.... The sky, air, and climate

were just the same as in other places; every afternoon there was a rain squall that

lasted for about an hour. The admiral writes that he attributes this to the great

forests of that land; he knew from experience that formerly this also occurred in the

Canary, Madeira, and Azore Islands, but since the removal of forests that once

covered those islands they do not have so much mist and rain as before."

 

The Life of the Admiral Christopher Columbus by his Son Ferdinand

Translated by Benjamin Keen (1978).