Lalbagh Botanical Garden
From this panoramic pic, you can appreciate the greatness of this tree: a centuries-old kapok (Ceiba pentandra) standing amid Bangalore’s Indian megacity hustle. This giant reaches up to 200 feet tall with a trunk over 3m feet across, supported by massive tripod-like buttresses that resemble gigantic human feet. Though kapoks grow astonishingly fast — up to 4m per year — this specimen has survived over 200 years, making it a rare, ancient landmark in Lalbagh Botanical Garden. Its umbrella-shaped crown spreads in horizontal tiers like a pagoda, sheltering dozens of birds, frogs, and plants in its own canopy ecosystem. Sacred to the Maya, who believed souls ascended to heaven through its highest branches, the kapok also produces silky fibers eight times lighter than cotton, once used in WW2 life preservers. In the city’s hubbub, this living monument reminds us of nature’s enduring majesty.
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Taken on Saturday January 21, 2017
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Posted on Saturday June 6, 2026
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Dominique 60 said:
Annemarie said:
Happy weekend!
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