These are the first trees I learned about on my first visit to Sydney, but it's taken me more than six years of blogging to write about them.
The jacaranda tree, with its blueish-purple blossoms, symbolizes Australia's dazzling charm, similar to how the cherry blossom trees signify the splendor of DC.
Interestingly, neither tree is a native, but folks still travel to see them.
The cherry blossom tree is from Japan, and the jacaranda, Brazil.
Nonetheless, Australians view the beautiful jacaranda tree as integral to their landscape.
A photo I shot in Sydney while out walking. Sydney is a walking city. |
Jacaranda tree in my daughter's back garden |
Aussies and tourists grab their cameras in search of the best place to shoot these spectacular trees.
Some say the place to go for stunning jacaranda pictures in Sydney is McDougall Street in the harborside neighborhood of Kirribilli.
There, tree branches full of blossoms overlap, creating a dazzling lilac canopy across the sky.
Kirribilli was my daughter Lyndsi's first neighborhood when she migrated to Sydney, and it remains my favorite.
I would always visit McDougall Street to admire the display.
However, I arrived there too late in the season this year.
Many of the blossoms necessary to create that fantastic umbrella-like covering had already dropped.
But that didn't stop me and others from photographing those that remained.
At times the streets were blocked by people taking pictures.
Folks photographing jacarandas on McDougall Street |
I was as interested in the tourist as I was in the jacarandas.
These trees are so widely dispersed in Australia that you've got a chance to see and photograph them anywhere you go in the states of Queensland, Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia, or New South Wales (home to Sydney).
Jacaranda trees are not the tallest, but they tower overhead high enough to provide shade.
They can reach heights up to 49 feet, with a branch span of 29 feet.
Royal Botanical Gardens - Sydney (I tried to wait for these folks to leave before taking the picture, but they were there for the day, I wasn't.) |
I took this picture on a neighborhood walk - I love how the camera captured the colors!
The jacarandas spaced apart add color throughout the neighborhood.
My daughter's back garden, my favorite jacaranda to photograph
A friendly neighborhood picture I took from the footpath.
There are two jacaranda trees in the shot - can you spot them?
I took this picture on a neighborhood walk - I love how the camera captured the colors! |
The jacarandas spaced apart add color throughout the neighborhood. |
My daughter's back garden, my favorite jacaranda to photograph |
A friendly neighborhood picture I took from the footpath. There are two jacaranda trees in the shot - can you spot them? |
As spring fades into summer, the purple blossoms slowly fall to the ground like purple rain.
However, unlike the song in which purple rain signifies the end of times, the falling purple blossoms of the jacaranda tree mean new beginnings: Spring!
And, if you're fortunate to have them land on your head, it's a sign of good luck!
Jacaranda flowers covering the ground creates an illusion that the blossoms are a mirror image of the tree.
For me, the sight and smell of the jacarandas flavor the city.
Indigenous South Americans call the tree 'Guarani,' which means fragrance.
But the floral smell from the actual blossoms is mild.
It is the dried-out leaves that have accumulated under the tree that has a robust fragrance.
The colors and smells from the blossoms and leaves stimulate the senses, which can be hypnotizing and tranquil.
I remember thinking one day while walking past a groove of jacarandas that the air smelled like Sydney!
Photo compliments of my friend Sharon Daly-Giehtbrock, (Adelaide)
In contrast to the sky, the blossoms have a majestic hue that is picturesque and downright flamboyant!
Photo taken at the Forrestville shops
The soft, delicate purple blossoms grow in clusters and are shaped like little trumpets, making them seem like royalty compared to the other trees in bloom.
Once off the tree, the petals wither and turn blue before completely drying out.
Jacaranda petals after falling off the tree |
Very informative my friend.I just love the beauty of Jacarandas,the outstanding colour always feels like home to me.love and light
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