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Where plants
and trees from around the world seen in one
place, Hakgala Botanical Gardens, just 10km
away from Nuwara Eliya City. Hakgala is one
of the places one visits as an essential
part of a pleasant journey in the famous
hill resort of Nuwara Eliya. The site is
legendary. It was once the pleasure garden
of Ravana of the Ramayana epic and according
to many, it was one of the places where the
beautiful Sitha was hidden by the demon
king. The present botanic gardens were
founded in 1860 by the eminent British
botanist Dr. G.H.K. Thwaites who was
superintendent of the more famous gardens at
Peradeniya, near Kandy.
It was the
site initially for experiments with cinchona
whose bark yielded quinine, esteemed as a
tonic and febrifuge. Quinine at that time
was widely used as a specific for malaria.
This was perhaps the reason for the
popularity of and tonic in these parts -
quinine being the principle ingredient of
tonic water. The cool, equable climate of
the hakgala area, whose mean temperature is
around 60 degrees Fahrenheit, encouraged the
introduction of suitable temperate zone
plants, both ornamental and useful. These
included conifers and cedars from Australia,
Bermuda and Japan, and cypresses from the
Himalayas, china and as far a field as
Persia, Mexico and California. New Caledonia
gave Hakgala a special variety of pines and
there are specimens of this genus from the
canary Island as well.
An English
oak, introduced around 1890, commemorates
the "hearts of oak" of Britain's vaunted sea
power, and there is a good-looking specimen
of the camphor tree, whose habitat is
usually in regions above 12,000m. If you
have left your heart in an English garden,
you will surely find it again in Hakgala's
Rose garden. where the sights and scents of
these glorious blooms can be experienced in
their infinite variety. From there it is a
quiet stroll from the sublime to the exotic
sophistication of the orchid House. A
special attraction here is the verity of
montane orchids, many of them endemic to Sri
Lanka.
It would be in
the worst possible taste to describe the
Fernery as a collection of "vascular
cryptograms" But that is how the dictionary
describes the plant whose delicate fronds
conjure up visions of misty grottoes,
lichen-covered stones and meandering
streams. The Fernery at Hakgala is a shady
harbour of many quiet walks, in the shad of
the Hakgala Rock, shaped like the jawbone of
an elephant, from which the place gets its
name. Sri Lanka's ferns are well represented
here, as are those of Australia and New
Zealand.
Hakgala is a
temperate hill-country garden where also the
languid low-country lotus and water lily
floats in their serene loveliness. Pinks and
blues emerging from a flat- floating
background of lush leaves, recall the calm
of yellow-robed monks, white-clad, devotees
and flickering oil lamps. In time, the
highlands bracing breezes dispel the languor
of lotus land and even cause a shiver as a
temperature lowers. The Hakgala Botanical
Gardens is one of the lovely contrasts of
Sri Lanka, a home to plants and trees from
around the world, making them seem to be
part of the scenic beauty.
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