BangaloreWALKS
History.
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VIJAY's
MUSINGS
Colville’s
Glory
From the land of the Baobab, Delonix
regia and the Lemurs
There
are many of these picture perfect trees in Lalbagh.
The tree is named after Sir Charles Colville
who was Army Commander-in-chief in Bombay from 1819
to 1825 and subsequently Governor of Mauritius from
1828 to 1834. Bojer, an Austrian Botanist, first found
a single cultivated tree in 1824 in Madagascar when
he mounted a specimen collecting expedition from Mauritius.
Further, he described, in 1829, the flamboyant (Delonix
regia or Gulmohur) which also he found in Madagascar.
Eight of the ten known species of Baobabs also come
from Madagascar. It was from Mauritius
that Colville’s Glory and the Gulmohar were
disseminated worldwide, including India.
We know that plants
from Tenerife, Turkey, Persia, Kabul and Mauritius
were brought in by Tipu Sultan to
Lalbagh. Tipu had an emissary who spent over 18 months
in Mauritius collecting seeds and saplings for planting
in India. However, Colville’s Glory
was planted in Lalbagh after Tipu’s time.
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The genus Colvillea
has only one species - Colvillea racemosa
which grows very well in Bangalore. Colvilleas have
been planted successfully in Bombay, Delhi and elsewhere
in India and the tropics. The feathery bipinnate
leaves which create a large spreading crown
on the tree make it an ideal shade giving
tree. The leaf formation together with the
hemispherical spread itself would be sufficient reason
for valuing the tree. When the tree is not in flower
it can be mistaken for a Gulmohur.
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However, the bole
or trunk is quite different in Colville’s
Glory. The trunk is a coppery colour and in certain
parts of India parakeets make their nests on the bole,
though we have not seen this happen at Lalbagh/Bangalore.
The Gulmohur of course, has an entirely different
trunk which, as the tree gets older, often has buttresses
to transmit the weight of the heavy branches to the
ground. The wood of the Gulmohur is weak and this
would be a means of strengthening the trunk of the
tree. However, the trunk of Colville’s Glory
is sturdier and grows straight out of the ground without
buttresses. |
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When in
flower the tree is a spectacular sight to
behold. The showy flowers in branched
spikes held above the leaves droop down in conical
racemes. The colour is a lovely ochre orange and the
drooping clusters of the buds are an arresting sight.
The buds in the racemes diminish in size towards the
end, giving the impression of a cone with
nuts embedded on it. |
Mahesh has taken
out a number of photographs of the Colville’s
Glory when in full bloom. The tree bustles
with life. The flowers have bees busying
themselves collecting nectar. It is not merely the
bees but also squirrels, kites,
mynahs, etc., which come on to the tree when it is
in bloom. The photographs with the grand pariah kites
on the canopy of the tree and those of the three striped
palm squirrel portray this. This Musing is accompanied
by many photographs all of which we cannot resist
attaching as they are excellent illustrations of the
tree, the leaves, the buds, the flowers and the related
fauna - the photographs say it all. |
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