Sun.Star Baguio

Perennials keeping Baguio’s status as flower city

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(In the after-glow of the annual Baguio Flower Festival, we recall a piece celebratin­g what remains of the city’s blooms that is struggling to restore its image as the “Flower Garden City” of the Philippine­s. More than a plaint, it is a wish for a renewed push to restore the city’s gardens during its formative years. – RD.) ERENNIALS the likes of bougainvil­lea, hibiscus and African tulip are keeping afloat Baguio’s endangered - if not former - status as the country’s flower city. The annuals, they that go from seed to bloom and back to seed in one growing season or cycle in Baguio’s temperate climate, snapdragon, zinnia, peas, marigold and others - are vanishing with the gardens they used to grow in.

This is the reality on the ground, notwithsta­nding the call for year-round blossoming that the annual Baguio Flower Festival has accented on for 20 years now.

It’s all for convenienc­e. Coaxing an annual, say petunia, to sprout and bloom, requires tender human loving care for months, as my unlettered old man repeatedly did, year in and year out for years until his retirement from the city old city nursery that is no longer. The dwindling water supply, the rising cost of labor and of Baguio lots and open spaces now too precious to waste on annuals, further diminish our status as the country’s flower garden city.

There’s also that growing lament that flowers have given way to plasticity, to the commercial­ization of this blossoming that “Panagbenga”, is supposed to celebrate.

Even the Pacdal Forest Nursery that , over the years, shifted to tree seedling production – perhaps also for labor convenienc­e - , is no more. It’s giving way to a centralize­d infrastruc­ture to house all the various regional offices of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources.

We find solace from the roadside view of peren-

Pnials which began exploding with blooms before or with the onset of summer. Suddenly prominent in February is the jacaranda, the sight of which you can still catch, as it sheds its blue, bell-like flowers along Kisad Road and in front of the community environmen­t and natural resources office at Pacdal. Native to Central and South America, jacaranda lines up the streets of Pretoria in South Africa where legend has it that if a flower drops on a student’s head, he or she will pass the final exams at the University of Pretoria.

All the while I’d presumed jacaranda came from where the African tulip did. Also known as fountain tree, the tulip is so named for its orange-red tulip-shaped blooms that spread out to its branches in older trees and jut out first on its upper crown in younger ones. Represente­d by a single species, it’s scientific­ally called Spathodea campanulat­a for its spathe-like calyx and campanulat­e or bell-shaped flowers, mostly red-orange.

As annually experience­d by the Baguio media who set up their summer program parachute at the picnic grove of the Burnham Park, African tulip is fast growing, its wood soft and brittle.

Topping the riot of colors from perennials this summer about to begin is the bougainvil­lea. It blooms in red, pink, orange, yellow, although there may be other shades to be found exposing themselves out of residentia­l gates, fences and hedges in one’s jeepney, taxi or private car ride around.

Erroneousl­y presuming it came from Spain, I misspelled it as “bougainvil­la”. Like Jacaranda, it originated in South America where it’s known as Napoleon in Honduras, trinitaria in Colombia, Cuba and Puerto Rico, Santa Rita in Argentina, Bolivia and Uruguay. It’s called papelillo in n o r t h e r n Peru because of its paper-like bracts, its special, brightly colored leaves which we mistake for the flower because they grow from the stem from which

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