Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Baldha Garden, Dhaka

Baldha Garden is one of the oldest Botanical Gardens in Bangladesh. It was established by Narenda Narayan Chawdhury. Currently located at Wari (near Narinda), in the Old part of Dhaka city, the capital of Bangladesh.
Baldha Garden_Dhaka_Bangladesh
Baldha Garden is an enriched botanical garden which spans 3.15 acres (1.27 ha). It has a collection of 672 species of plants. The Baldha Garden is now managed as a satellite unit of the National Botanical Garden situated in Mirpur by the Department of Forestry. The garden is enriched with rare plant species collected from different parts of the world.


Baldha Garden _the oldest Botanical Garden in Dhaka City

The collection of the garden is classified into seven categories – orchids, cacti, conservatory plants, aquatic plants, roses, rockery and wall plants, arboretum, and miscellaneous Flora. The garden has about 15, 0000 plants representing 672 species. Many of these are exotic and rare plants; perhaps the richest collection of exotic plants in the country is housed in the Baldah Garden. The flora of the garden represents collections from over 50 different countries. The garden has among its attractions the ‘century plant’ which is believed to flower only once in hundred years, and was seen in bloom a few years back. The Adansonia digitata tree which adorns the garden is historical. Central African aborigines used to seal their deads in holes dug into the cavity of the tree in order to mummify the body long before the days of the Pharaohs. The Psyche unit of the garden houses several varieties of the aquatic plant Nymphea pubescens, the national flower of Bangladesh which is called ‘shapla’ in Bangla, maintained in a section of the garden known as the; Shapla House;. The rose garden in Cybele is famous throughout the subcontinent for its rich collection of roses. One of the two greenhouses has rich collections of orchid, aroids and conservatory plants. The Baldah Garden, although relatively small in size, is an exciting place for naturalists and tourists to visit.

No comments:

Post a Comment