![]() ![]() “This is not a tree I would see in Vermont,” she said. “I want to send these back to my friends in Vermont, you know, to show them what Pasadena looks like this time of year,” she said. Greta Pangborn, visiting Pasadena, was capturing images of the purple trees on her phone Tuesday afternoon to make her friends jealous. About increasingly common SoCal wildfires, the song describes palm trees becoming “candles in the murder wind,” juxtaposing the haze of the violet trees with thickets of gray ash in an apocalyptic mashup: A placard reads the end of days /Jacaranda boughs are bending in the haze.Ī 1945 Pasadena Star-News article quotes colonialist Dorothea Fairbridge’s “Gardens of South Africa,” describing the jacarandas in Pretoria that “trail a purple cloud of glory” and beautify the city.įor most, nationalistic expressions are a bit much. In its punk hit “Los Angeles Is Burning,” Bad Religion takes a darker view. Turney said many pit the purple onslaught against Washington D.C.’s cherry blossoms, squaring the two in a friendly East-West tussle. Like the infamous Santa Ana Winds mentioned in Raymond Chandler’s noir writings, the jacaranda trees have taken their place in Southern California ethos. ![]() Paloma Street in East Pasadena often has a startling display, but on Wednesday, less than half were in bloom. In 1989, a tree survey in Pasadena listed 119 jacaranda trees on Del Mar Boulevard, where the trees line both sides of the street from Arroyo Parkway to Hill Street, and most were in full bloom this week. The jacarandas are blooming in Aldrich Park! □□□ /4CukBSkCnt Or, you might say in sing-song: If the June Gloom is strong, the purple blooms last long. If the cooler weather continues, the flowers on the jacaranda trees will stay longer, he said. “They are not completely out yet: Usually by the first week of June, they will have all their leaves gone and showing mostly flowers.” “They seem to be right on schedule, starting to show their color now, around late May,” said Frank McDonough, botanist at the Los Angeles County Arboretum in Arcadia. Heads turn upwards, then eyes follow the slow descent of the trumpet-shaped flowers back to earth, leaving puddles of purple rain, messy lawns and slippery sidewalks in their wake. From Long Beach to Santa Barbara, Pasadena to Santa Ana and all points inland, these immigrants from South America and Africa are sending up blue blossoms like nature’s fireworks. ![]() Spring stars of the tree world - jacaranda mimosifolia - are on the scene, ready for their close-ups. Just as countless others came here to be seen, they haven’t missed their chance, nudging out iconic palms and briefly taking their place as the most colorful trees in Southern California - until their petals fade quickly in the summer heat. ![]()
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