BangaloreWALKS
History.
Culture. Discovery. |
VIJAY's
MUSINGS
|
May Musings
In India, we have been through our
“Fall” (February –
April), when our deciduous trees drop their leaves
resulting in a look of barrenness. Most of the flowering
trees have bloomed gloriously at the start of Summer,
when their flowers, free of leaves were the prima
donnas of Lalbagh. This is the time for rejuvenation.
Since then a wave of vitality has swept through Lalbagh.
The trees are now beautifully dressed with new leaves
and are prepared to draw sustenance from the Monsoons.
The tender luminous leaves of many trees like the
Honge (Pongamia) have now turned a darker green. There
are a hundred shades and hues and tints of green and
much of this is determined by the structure, formation
and texture of the leaves. The colour green always
leaves behind a feeling of richness, tranquility and
loveliness.
After
the blooming of the Palas tree, the
Coral trees, the Asoka
trees (Saraca indica and Saraca taipengensis ), the
Silk Cotton trees, the Raintrees,
the Brownea trees, the Lignum
vitae, the Pachira, the Jacaranda
and so many others in a riot of colours we still have
the Gulmohur, the Cassias,
Plumerias and the Jarul
(Lagerstromea speciosa) and the Copperpod
(Peltophorum) blooming in Bangalore.
|
The
Plumeria
Variously known
as the Frangipani, the temple
tree, the pagoda tree, the
champa and lily of the coast,
this tree is now found in the Old World across Asia,
from India eastwards and in Hawaii. The tree itself
has been named to commemorate the French botanist
Charles Plumier who collected plant specimens from
the Caribbean in the 17th Century.
|
|
| 
A stand of Plumeria Trees in Lalbagh
|
There are two
derivations of the name Frangipani - one is derived
from the name of an Italian family – the Frangipanis
- who were perfumers before the discovery of the Americas,
and the second one by French settlers in the Caribbean
who referred to the thick white latex of the tree
as “frangipanier” or coagulated milk.
I have no doubt regarding the etymological route which
I would choose: very definitely the one connected
with the perfumers. The frangipani is of all flowers
the freshest - the flower itself formed simply and
elegantly and with a wonderful fragrance. In Hawaii
the Frangipani is used to make leis.
The preferred flowers for leis are the frangipanis
and orchids.
Lalbagh has a
large collection of around 50 Plumerias, some to the
east of the Rock, others to the southeast of the Lake
and a stand west of the path leading from the massive
silk cotton tree towards the Cameron Gate abounds
with Plumerias of every kind. The flowers are particularly
fragrant at night luring sphinx moths to them. The
moths pollinate the flowers which have no nectar,
transferring pollen from flower to flower in the endless
search for nectar – a superb example of
subterfuge in nature. |
Auroville
has a number of formal gardens. The Matrimandir Garden,
the 12th garden – the Garden of Perfection is
the garden of the Frangipani. I understand at Auroville
they have developed a beautiful dwarf Plumeria obtusa
which grows about 2 feet in height and is covered
with blooms.
The frangipani
is sacred to Hindus and Buddhists. If a tree is uprooted,
it still sprouts leaves and flowers for sometime thus
becoming a symbol for endless life and immortality.
Both Buddhists and Muslims plant the tree in their
graveyards knowing that every day a few of the fragrant
flowers will fall gently on the graves of the departed.
I am sure if the plant were not from the New World,
the Muslims, who had a large vocabulary of flora,
would have planted it together with pomegranates and
fig trees, in the parterres of their Islamic gardens.
Similarly, with their fine sensibilities of form and
colour they would have also introduced an Australian
tree, the Bottlebrush or Callistemon:
“beautiful stamens” into their gardens.
|
|
Back to Vijay's
Musings Go
Back to Green Heritage Walks Home Go!
|