Chicle
Chicle is the latex from the Sapodilla tree which is native to Central and South America.
Chicle is a natural gum collected from the Sapodilla tree and is made into the most popular chewing gum in Mexico. A portion of this article is reprinted from the Chicle.com website.
Chicle is the latex from the Sapodilla tree which is native to Central and South America. This latex was collected and used as a chewing gum by the Mayans.
Chicle was mixed with sugar and flavoring, typically sassafras or liquorices and made into a gum which was patented in 1871. This led to the production of other well known gum products such as Chicklets, and Wrigley gums.
The chewing gum industry has long since exhausted the supplies of natural chicle so most gum is now made of synthetic blends of rubber, resins and oils
Chicle Collection Process
This is an excerpt from Chicle.com describing the collection process of this natural gum. Originally, chicle -natural chewing gum-
is the milky juice, or latex of the “chicozapote”, or sapodilla tree (Manilkara
zapota), found in the tropical forest of the Yucatán Peninsula, Belize, and
northern Guatemala. Today this region, which is the heart of the Mayan world and
is Known as the Gran Petén, has the second largest land surface covered whit
tropical rain forest on the American continent, the Amazonia ranking
first.
The sapodilla is the most abundant tree in the jungles of the Gran
Petén. In some places it is possible to find over thirty trees in a single
hectare, while there will be only one mahogany tree in that same area.
Sapodillas sometimes reach a height of over 40 metres, with diameters of more
than a meter.
Chicle is collected from july to February, during the
rainy season, when the latex flows better. With a sharp-edged machete, chicle
collectors make zigzag cuts from the base of the tree trunk up to its first
branches. The latex drips down these grooves and is collected in a bag. At
present, approximately 5,000 chicle collectors perfom their arduous, artisanal
work each season in the jungles of the Gran Petén.
One of the main
environmental problems faced by our planet is the growing destruction of
tropical forest. The most widespread solution put into practice to curb this
process has been to create natural parks and reserves where the utilization of
the resources found there is usually prohibited. As an economic activity, chicle
extraction is very important for the people who live in the Gran Petén. There,
chicle collectors have become zealous guardians of the sapodilla tree and its
ecological settings. Through the consumption of NATURAL GUM CHICLE™, a
sustainable extractive activity is being promoted, helping to keep alive the
jungles where the Mayan civilization once flourished.