Sunday, 1 April 2018

Spring Song of Delhi - Part II

March 2018

The colourful and vibrant spring continues to delight under blue skies. Enjoy the colours of nature.

A sight guaranteed to make you break into a Spring Song

The Spring Kaleidoscope - Yellow Tabebuias, Scarlet Indian Corals and Silky Oaks
As you go about exploring the little known monuments in Delhi, you realise the beautiful side of your city that lay hidden from you all these years. Then came the turn of all these wonderful cultural events happening and you discover yet another aspect of the city which was unexperienced so far. Even as Delhi gets pummelled for its grey skies and toxic air, there is always some beauty around the street corner and in the neighbourhood parks – all you need to do is to stop and observe.

One of the prettiest flowering trees of Delhi - Moulmein Rosewood (Millettia peguensis)

Spring however makes the job easy. Walk or drive along any road in Delhi and watch the colours of joy on every tree and shrub. The joy is two-fold. The flowering trees after shedding leaves turn into glorious showers of yellow, pink and mauve. The trick is to be everywhere every few days to be able to catch the colours. The change is so sudden that it will leave you gasping with bewilderment.

You had a feeling that the sight would be incredible but were not sure of the timings. Things change pretty fast during these spring days. As you drive down the road, the surprise reveals itself slowly. Entire canopies are filled with hanging strings of purple pearls. They sway in the breeze twinkling soundlessly.

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Spring Song of Delhi - Part I
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On one of the side streets, the flowers shimmer in the setting sun. The area is a high security zone. You approach the plain clothes wearing security personnel asking for permission to shoot. You got to see the expression on the cops’ faces as they crane their necks up. It is apparent that they noticed the flowers hanging right above them for the first time. Walkie-talkies crackle and permission is granted.

Pradip Krishen describes Moulmein Rosewood as “in full bloom the massed, tiny flowers look like a diaphanous mauve mist”

Now here's the question - why do honey bees and even wasps love the Moulmein flowers so much - there is constant buzz around the entire tree

Here the Moulmein Rosewood looks like a deciduous tree with spreading canopy

Up ahead more trees bedecked in mauve and purple create never seen before scenes. The good news is that the maximum flowering happens in the second week of April.

Moulmein Rosewood - The guy in mauve shirt and the tree with mauve flowers posing for you! On Maharshi Raman Marg
The trees are interesting in their shape. While some are very tall with no radiating branches, others look decidedly deciduous with spreading canopies. 

Also known as Jewels on a String
Moulmein Rosewood posing against the corner turret of Sikander Lodhi Tomb in Lodhi Gardens - this one is tall and straight like a conifer
A week ago these tall slender trees in the back of the Flower Garden in Nehru Park were all green and brown with few flowers. You were ruing the changing weather and were wondering if the early summer had forced the trees to skip flowering. And then a week later, the same setting provides one of the most unexpectedly glorious spectacle you have ever seen in Delhi.

The most incredible sight in Delhi



The horizon seems to have burst into this incredible yellow. You sit on the grass and gape at the sight. This is a perfect frame – palette of flowers scattered in the green grass, just beyond the yellow burst under perfect blue skies.

Flower Therapy under the moon


After soaking in the scene you walk and come sit under the Caribbean Trumpet Tree or Tabebuia. You are just so lucky. Last year it was Amaltash Hanami just a few yards away from this spot. Last week it was Bougainvillea Hanami at Lodhi Gardens and before that Silk Cotton Hanami at Sunder Nursery, Jacaranda Hanami at Indraprastha Park and now this Tabebuia Hanami. 

Tabebuia Hanami

What a lovely sight - Caribbean Trumpet Flowers against a blue sky


It is a breezy afternoon . The falling yellow flowers together with the brown leaves weave a carpet on the green grass. The whole setting seems festive and joyous. These are precious moments. This is nature saying that she is doing her best and it is now our turn to let nature do her job unhindered.

There is some Pink happening too. The first sighting of a lone tree on a roundabout blew you away. You had rightly called it the prettiest tree in Delhi. Since then you have discovered more trees in Lodhi Gardens.

The Amazing Pink Poui in all its glory

Basant ki Rani or Pink or Rosy Trumpet Tree
Just beyond on the grass you see these centipede like yellow flowers. You look up – these are conifer like tall trees and on the top you see the golden flowers. It is as if someone has streaked their hair brown. The tree is called Silky Oak. Now it strikes you. Looking from a distance, these trees had formed a brown and green backdrop to the yellow Tabebuias. The brown was actually these flowers. This is a pleasant discovery.
The Silky Oak


Also called Golden Pine (Grevillea robusta)
Before you get a chance to go to Purulia to savour Palash blooming across the landscape, luck has again smiled. Behind Lenin’s statue, a lone Palash has bloomed in all its orange glory. The sight is enchanting.

The orange blooms of Palash or Dhak tree

Jab Jab mere ghar aana
Phool Palash ka le aana

Parrots seem to love the nectar of Palash flowers. It is no coincidence that the flowers look like its curved red beak 

Palash is also called Flame of the Forest and is the State Flower of Jharkhand

Palash Hanami at Nehru Park

Olive Green Branches
Flaunt vibrant crimson blossoms
Seasonal bright bloom
The fire of flaming palash
Burns the dark contours of gloom

An Ode to the Palash
You can swear a few days ago, it was just another non-descriptive tree in the park that you did not even notice. What a difference a week makes in Delhi’s Spring.

The sight is enchanting. Parrots are busy gorging on the nectar. You are again gaping and smiling.

Silky Oak sprouting new leaves
Gab Tree (Diospyros malabarica) or Kala Tendu has long surprisingly red glossy leaves
The massive Peepal now sprouting leaves towers over the Bada Gumbad in Lodhi Gardens

Kosam or Kusum (Schleichera oleosa) is an enchantingly beautiful tree and is the centre of attraction in a park when its new leaves sprout in a crimson tide.

Outer Ring Road near SDA is lined with beautiful Kusums


While the flowering trees turn technicolour, fresh leaves sprout on other trees. The always beautiful Kusum tree has the most delicate red leaves. Stand under the canopy as sunlight catches the tints. This is nature therapy. This is soporific. You want to lie down on the grass, look at the shimmering stars of red and copper and scarlet and doze off dreaming of blue skies, flowers and fresh crisp air.

This is Delhi’s Spring!

Related Posts on this Blog


Photography Locations
  • Nehru Park
  • Lodhi Gardens
  • Maharshi Raman Marg, Lodhi Estate
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Tuesday, 27 March 2018

Spring Song of Delhi - Part I

March 2018


Times are changing and so is Delhi’s weather. This was a different winter; a winter that never felt like the Dilli ki Sardi you knew. It was so mild that your favourite muffler or long scarf did not come out and the rajai stayed in the box. The blankets took care of whatever cold the winter offered. Usually January and February see showers that make the cold air fresh and crispy. Nope, this time there were no showers either to wash the trees of their soot and dust or to make Delhi a little more liveable. The sad, dark leaves unable to breath weighed down heavily from the branches and you continued to breath the vile air. It seems Delhi will soon lose its winters and it will be one long hot season blazing through the year.

There was just one bright spot and that too short-lived. Spring arrived and the air cleaned up. Blue skies finally appeared. While last year NDMC did a spectacular job with the flowers and the roundabouts, this year, just like the winters they too seem to have sleep-walked. The roundabouts seem sadly uninviting and the flowers looked uninterested. 

The trees of Delhi have come to your rescue. The short Spring thankfully makes the trees drop their dusty leaves. Silk Cottons, the old faithfuls of Delhi burst into sparkling reds, peepal leaves take all hues possible before turning into the most delicious green you will ever see. White Kachnars bejewel the blue skies. Shahtoot and Sheesham turn gloriously green. Bougainvillea explodes into molten red lava. The Rosy Trumpet Tree makes the skies blush pink.

The sights are refreshing. While driving, now you need to keep one eye on the road ahead and another on the trees above. 

Here is a look:  



Rain Daisies or African Daisies


Pansies of All Colours
You are seeing Tulips for the first time in Delhi - Nehru Park

And the first time you are seeing Sarson Ke Phool (Mustard) on Delhi roundabouts! Are they?



This is the Flower Park in Nehru Park. At least this part did not disappoint; it was as flowery as last year. However, it seems the NDMC gave a miss to its annual flower show when different flowers and their owners are awarded prizes. 

Notice the trees in the background. A week later they will paint the horizon yellow!

A bed of red Petunias

Dahlia Flowered Zinnias

They look like marigolds but are actually dahlias. It is a different variety which is smaller and more compact and they bloom after the bigger ones have wilted and can withstand hot weather



Soon these flowers will turn into Dussheri Mangoes




Peepal trees are so ubiquitous in the Indian landscape that they are almost visible even when we stand below them on hot afternoons. They are unglamorous as they go about doing their job quietly.  Come spring and it is like you can stand in front and actually see leaves change colour every few minutes. The leaves turn red, copper and few other hues that you can't name. And then almost as if on cue, they turn green. A green so delicious and pretty that all you can do is stand by the road and stare even as passing motorists stare at you



Matching Matching -  Spring is beautiful in monochrome too - Yellow-Footed Green Pigeon (Treron phoenicoptera) sitting amongst the oh so delicious looking green leaves of Peepal (Ficus religosa), Along the wide boulevards of Noida, UP



Drum Stick or Sonjna (Moringa oleifera) Trees in full glory

The luminiscent Pilkhan under blue skies - Probably the prettiest sky gazing that you will ever experience over Delhi
Pilkhan - Ficus virens
The new leaves are reddish and copper colour. With the increasing and decreasing intensity of sunlight they seem to change colour every few minutes
Pilkhan - What a magnificent sight - Lodhi Colony is the only government housing colony built during British times, so this beautiful tree right here is a colonial legacy besides the ones in Lutyens Delhi


Is this the prettiest damn Pilkhan in Delhi - Gupta ji is just surprised that someone would actually stop and notice the tree and then walk under the tree taking photographs. He follows you around amazed.
The Gandhi cap wearing Gupta ji leads a blessed life. He lives on Jorbagh Road, just a short walking distance from his office in Mausam Bhawan on Lodhi Road. So even as Delhi heats up more every summer, Gupta ji still does not have a cooler. We step inside his Government quarter to see the still same British time ceiling fan. And then you feel it. While outside its already warming up, inside it is cool, almost cold. They will keep using blankets for some more time. The high roof is one reason – yes Lodhi Colony is the only British time government colony in Delhi.
The reason is outside in all its spring crowning glory. A grand old Pilkhan spreads its branches over the entire courtyard. The new leaves twinkle in the afternoon sun. Gupta ji eyes twinkle as he explains how reflection and refraction is colouring the leaves in all those hues. His wife and kids have come out and look at him and you with some incredulity.
Munching on home-made Gunjias, we make our way to Lodhi Gardens. We are going tree spotting.




Bougainvillea Hanami in Lodhi Gardens



The cascading shower of flowers fill the entire place with a special red and pink ambience lifting the mood and placing it up there where everything is gossamer and floaty.

The entire city is camping below the two bougainvilleas. There is a birthday party happening, a couple is making hundred poses for their pre-wedding shoot (they all should be banned from public places for causing serious harm to sensibilities of innocent people like you), a portrait shoot is going on. Every bench, inch and spot is taken.


The Green Wave


Indian Coral Tree or Tiger Claw (Erythrina variegata)

Jungli Badam or Wild Indian Almond (Sterculia foetida)

In its annual restoration exercise, Spring studs stars on the dome of Sheesh Gumbad in Lodhi Gardens - More Pilkhan Delights



The old favourite Neem
Caribbean Trumpet Tree (Tabebuia aurea) - In another week the trees will turn into a brilliant show of yellow


Pink Poui or Pink Trumpet Tree (Tabebuia rosea)

Also known as Basant ki Rani - equally beautiful name

Some red Bottle Brush, some violet Bougainvillea, some more red Silk Cotton


Can't get enough of Pilkhan

Finally sunset at Lotus Temple
Today's Spring day is perhaps the loveliest so far - skies have turned blue, leaves change colour every moment, the crunch of fallen leaves under the feet feels heavenly, birds chirp happily in the branches. In the evening, clouds and the setting sun add dash of purple and pink to the skies. The cool breeze makes the nights magical as you walk through the royal palms in the colony park. Legs walk to a special rhythm. Smile is playing on your face. A single day has added months to your life. Delhi knows how to keep our romance alive. You don't want this beautiful day of spring to ever end.  

Related Posts on this Blog

Delhi's Star Spangled Spring

Delhi 'Holi'Day 2018
Delhi 'Holi'Day 2016
Delhi 'Holi'Day 2015
Floss Silk Flowers

Blooming Walls of Lodhi Colony  

Love in the Times of Amaltas


Photography Locations
  • Nehru Park
  • Sunder Nursery
  • Lodhi Gardens
  • Lodhi Colony
  • New Delhi Roundabouts
  • Noida Roads
  • Lotus Temple
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