View allAll Photos Tagged jacarandas
The blue jacaranda has been cultivated in almost every part of the world where there is no risk of frost; established trees, however, tolerate brief spells of temperatures down to around −7 °C (19 °F).
In Europe the jacaranda is grown on the Mediterranean coast of Spain (it is prominent in the Valencian Community, the Balearic Islands and Andalusia, with especially large specimens present in Valencia, Alicante and Seville, and usually with earlier flowering than in the rest of Europe), in southern Portugal (notably in Lisbon), southern Italy (Naples and Cagliari have many mature specimens), southern Greece (especially Athens) and the islands of Malta and Cyprus. The tree is not endemic to Greece. The tree arrived in Greece in the 1840s.
Main street with picnic areas, week after Jacaranda festival in this rural town in Queensland, Australia.
Driving back from Haleakala National Park, I ran across these beautiful trees full of purple blossoms. The road was lined with them.
Tenerife.
Costa del Silencio.
Jacaranda is a genus of 49 species of flowering plants in the family Bignoniaceae, native to tropical and subtropical regions of Mexico, Central America, South America, Cuba, Hispaniola, Jamaica, and the Bahamas
We planted this lovely, but messy tree, when it was not much larger than its pot. Now, when in full bloom, it nearly fills half the backyard.
A sprinkling of Jacaranda blooms on the snaking branches of a tree in the grounds of St Mary's Church on the Kangaroo Point Cliffs, high above the city.
Newcastle's Jacarandas are a couple of weeks past their prime now, but they sure put on a fine display this year.
Taken with a Helios 44 58mm f2 (ГЕЛИОС-44) 13 blade silver M39 lens.
It is the Jacaranda season in Brisbane.
This image was turned into a painting using photoshop and Topaz Studio 2.