The three natural varieties of green cardamom plants are: • Malabar (Nadan/native), as the name suggests, is the native variety of
Kerala. These plants have floral
racemes (which bear the pods) that grow horizontally along the ground. • Mysore, as the name suggests, is a native variety of
Karnataka. These plants have floral
racemes which grow vertically upwards. The Mysore variety has declined, however, in the past few decades owing to the emergence of the more resistant and better-yielding 'Green Gold' variety, and which is the most common form of cardamom harvested in Kerala. • Vazhuka is a naturally occurring hybrid between Malabar and Mysore varieties, and the
panicles grow neither vertically nor horizontally, but in between. Recently, a few planters isolated high-yielding plants and started multiplying them on a large scale. The most popular high-yielding variety is 'Njallani', which is a unique high-yielding cardamom variety developed by an Indian farmer, Sebastian Joseph, at
Kattappana in the South Indian state of Kerala. K. J. Baby of
Idukki District, Kerala, has developed a purely white-flowered variety of Vazhuka type green cardamom having higher yield than 'Njallani'. The variety has high adaptability to different shade conditions and can also be grown in waterlogged areas. ==References==