Horton Plains Witnesses Spectacular Bloom of Elusive Nelu Flower After Over a Decade

Date:

October 07, Colombo (LNW): Visitors to Sri Lanka’s Horton Plains National Park are being treated to a remarkable natural event, as the elusive Nelu flower has burst into bloom across parts of the highland reserve — a phenomenon believed to occur only once every twelve years.

This rare botanical spectacle, drawing the attention of nature lovers, botanists, and tourists alike, involves the mass flowering of plants from the Strobilanthes genus, a group of tropical flora renowned for their mysterious, long-interval blooming cycles.

The event, which some describe as the “silent fireworks” of the forest, has transformed stretches of the park’s rugged grasslands and misty slopes into a fleeting sea of delicate purples and blues.

The Nelu flower, while not widely known outside botanical circles, holds ecological and cultural significance in the island’s central highlands. With over 350 identified species within the Strobilanthes genus, these plants are primarily native to tropical Asia and are distinguished by their synchronised, cyclical blooming — some species flowering en masse only once every 10 to 15 years before dying off in a fascinating natural lifecycle known as monocarpic flowering.

Share post:

spot_imgspot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Tamil Nadu Extends Vital Humanitarian Support to Flood-Affected Communities in Sri Lanka

Tamil Nadu Extends Vital Humanitarian Support to Flood-Affected Communities in Sri Lanka

President Urges Accurate Data for Timely Compensation

President Urges Accurate Data for Timely Compensation

Post-Cyclone Supply Shocks Expose Weak Links in Export Economy

Post-Cyclone Supply Shocks Expose Weak Links in Export Economy

Cyclone Tests Resilience of Sri Lanka’s Tourism Backbone

Cyclone Tests Resilience of Sri Lanka’s Tourism Backbone