<p>It’s that time of the year again, the city’s streets are lined with our own version of blooming Cherry Blossom — the Tabebuia Rosea.</p>.<p>Here are a few facts about these almost leafless trees that explode with delicate pink and white flowers.</p>.<p>The tree is native to south America and is colloquially known as the ‘pink trumpet’ or ‘pink lapacho’ trees; its two close cousins, the Tabebuia avellanedae and Tabebuia aurea also burst into bloom around early spring in Bengaluru.</p>.<p>It grows rapidly and can attain a height of 30 feet in the first three years of life. It has an average lifespan of 50 years. Following the flowering, seedpods form.</p>.<p>The seedpods ripen over the year and the feathery seeds are dispersed all over the ground below the tree.</p>.<p>The British introduced the trees in the city in the 1900s, as they had done in their other colonies across the world as part of a stylised colonial botanical aesthetic, which valued flashy, ornamental exotic species like this one, over the native ones.</p>.<p>SG Neginhal, widely regarded as the IFS officer who turned Bengaluru into a garden city was the one who planted these trees along the roads in the 1980’s.</p>.<p>These trees are present in other cities like Pune, Delhi, Mangaluru and parts of Mumbai as well, but they bloom best in Bengaluru, as the climate is ideal.</p>
<p>It’s that time of the year again, the city’s streets are lined with our own version of blooming Cherry Blossom — the Tabebuia Rosea.</p>.<p>Here are a few facts about these almost leafless trees that explode with delicate pink and white flowers.</p>.<p>The tree is native to south America and is colloquially known as the ‘pink trumpet’ or ‘pink lapacho’ trees; its two close cousins, the Tabebuia avellanedae and Tabebuia aurea also burst into bloom around early spring in Bengaluru.</p>.<p>It grows rapidly and can attain a height of 30 feet in the first three years of life. It has an average lifespan of 50 years. Following the flowering, seedpods form.</p>.<p>The seedpods ripen over the year and the feathery seeds are dispersed all over the ground below the tree.</p>.<p>The British introduced the trees in the city in the 1900s, as they had done in their other colonies across the world as part of a stylised colonial botanical aesthetic, which valued flashy, ornamental exotic species like this one, over the native ones.</p>.<p>SG Neginhal, widely regarded as the IFS officer who turned Bengaluru into a garden city was the one who planted these trees along the roads in the 1980’s.</p>.<p>These trees are present in other cities like Pune, Delhi, Mangaluru and parts of Mumbai as well, but they bloom best in Bengaluru, as the climate is ideal.</p>