Bloomin’ Gorgeous! It’s Jacaranda Season In Africa

Japan has cherry blossoms, Holland has fields of tulips, and Africa has its famous jacarandas. Though these trees are not indigenous to the continent, they were planted in various cities in southern and eastern Africa by the British around the turn of the 20th century. They erupt in vivid purple flowers in October and November, the southern hemisphere’s spring. Which means right about now, streets from Johannesburg to Nairobi are awash in a gorgeous carpet of violet.

Thousands of tourists flock to these cities every year to see the blooms. In fact, according to Reuters, up to 80% of the guests in Pretoria hotels in October are Japanese tourists who have come specifically for jacaranda viewing.

If you can’t make it in person, here are a few photos that illustrate the glorious spectacle that is jacaranda season in Africa.

Harare

Jacarandas on Milton Avenue, Harare (Shutterstock)

Jacaranda blossoms

Jacaranda blossoms in Pretoria (K. Kendall/flickr)

carpet jacarandas johannesburg

Jacarandas carpeting a road in Johannesburg (Nishaan Desai / flickr)

jacaranda ethiopia

A lone jacaranda tree in southern Ethiopia (David Stanley / flickr)

jacaranda hdr joburg

A jacaranda in HDR in Johannesburg (Paul Saad / flickr)

jacarandas nairobi

Jacarandas blooming with Nairobi skyline in background (davida3 / flickr)

jacaranda harare

Jacarandas blooming in Harare (Jude and Mark / flickr)

jacarandas downtown nairobi

Jacarandas lining the street in downtown Nairobi (Xiaojun Deng / flickr)

jacaranda african union square harare

Jacaranda tree in bloom at the Africa Union Square in Harare, Zimbabwe (damien_farrell / flickr)

panorama pretoria jacaranda

Panorama of Pretoria street with jacarandas in HDR (Paul Saad / flickr)

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