AT THE end of the drought period in March, many of us saw a beautiful sight along highways where many flowering plants began to bloom.
This extraordinary natural occurrence was not concentrated on one spot but instead spread around the island. The flowers were of beautiful shades of pink and covered almost the whole tree.
Singaporeans and visitors from other countries fly to Japan and South Korea to see the Sakura blossom in April. What attracts them is the concentration of flowering plants within a park. People are awed by the magnitude and size of such beautiful plants with flowers covering each and every branch.
We could do the same in Singapore by planting a lot of flowering plants in a designated park. When the trees bloom, their beauty will not be less than that of Sakura gardens in Japan. With such a park, we can add to our tourism brochures a walk under the flowering plants.
Can the authorities please consider this proposal?
Lee Huan Chiang
stupid...
uproot trees, dig up plants, destroy the flowering of other places just to put them in.. where? the Botanic Gardens? where they already are growing?
WE THANK Mr Lee Huan Chiang for his Forum Online letter, "Let the flowers bloom in one park to draw tourists", last Friday.
In Singapore's tropical climate, flowering of trees and plants is usually rather transient and triggered by a long dry spell followed by sudden heavy rain. Most of the time, the local climate is uniformly wet, without prolonged dry spells, and so intense flowering periods are few and far between. In addition, such rainfall patterns are very difficult, if not impossible, to predict in advance.
Rainfall-cued flowering is different from the seasonal flowering experienced in temperate countries such as Japan. For these reasons, there are no plans to specially dedicate a park to flowering trees in the hope of having them flower at the same time and creating a new attraction for tourists.
Nevertheless, we have planted many clusters of flowering trees to add a concentration of colour in our parks. For example, there is a row of Lagerstroemia speciosa trees (also commonly known as Rose of India) at West Coast Park. Several of them flowered last month and provided a visual treat for park visitors.
Nigel Goh
Director (Parks)
National Parks Board
i wonder about the citizens sometimes...
with flowers, will come bees and butterflies and the other things which eat them...
i'm all for the insects and stuff too coz they all add to biodiversity, colour and life...
then i think about a mad woman i came across... i was at a swimming pool where the decor and all that was that there were plants and trees all around, making the place a very nice, rustic and serene feel..
evidently, she was flustered by the surroundings because there were a few insects flying around.. she was giving the lifeguard guy who was in charge of the pool a hard time demanding that they spray the whole place with insecticide because there was "a lot of insects" and she kept ranting at the lifeguard who looked stunned..
just how many of our citizens are like that? and extrapolate that to just how many of the foreigners are like that?
(sorry.. just a rant.. needed to get that off my chest)
Originally posted by the Bear:i wonder about the citizens sometimes...
with flowers, will come bees and butterflies and the other things which eat them...
i'm all for the insects and stuff too coz they all add to biodiversity, colour and life...
then i think about a mad woman i came across... i was at a swimming pool where the decor and all that was that there were plants and trees all around, making the place a very nice, rustic and serene feel..
evidently, she was flustered by the surroundings because there were a few insects flying around.. she was giving the lifeguard guy who was in charge of the pool a hard time demanding that they spray the whole place with insecticide because there was "a lot of insects" and she kept ranting at the lifeguard who looked stunned..
just how many of our citizens are like that? and extrapolate that to just how many of the foreigners are like that?
(sorry.. just a rant.. needed to get that off my chest)
Remind me of another funny incident with a frantic lady in a rustic nature park.
My reply then "If you want clean nature without the bugs and sun, please stay at home and watch National Geographics."