Pretoria News

Jacarandas natural heritage

GOITSEMANG TLHABYE goitsemang.tlhabye@inl.co.za

THE City of Tshwane’s jacaranda trees should be conserved, preserved, protected and regarded as natural features of cultural significance wherever they stand in bloom.

This is according to historian and archaeologist Anton van Vollenhoven.

Yesterday, he said jacaranda trees, which are already blooming across the capital, should be protected as they were natural cultural heritage resources of importance.

Van Vollenhoven was speaking during a virtual presentation on jacaranda trees organised by the Ditsong Museum in collaboration with the City’s arts, culture and library services division, and the community and social development services department.

As it stood, he said, there existed legislation which already recognised the trees as a natural heritage due to the fact that once cultural significance was attributed to a natural phenomenon, it had the potential of having cultural significance.

And although jacaranda trees were not native to South Africa or Pretoria, Van Vollenhoven said they had a long-standing history that started as far back as November 16, 1906, when JD Clark donated 200 trees for the 51st anniversary of the founding of Pretoria.

Clark, a florist, nurseryman and seedsman, donated the trees as he felt they were just beautiful.

The first planting of the trees started in streets such as Bosman Street, formerly Koch Street, and Arcadia Park.

Frank Walton Jameson was regarded as “Jacaranda Jim” and was also famous for his efforts to plant jacaranda trees in Pretoria.

Van Vollenhoven said the tree’s existence had not been without its fair share of challenges, as environmental groups had wanted to remove them as far back as the 1970s and 1980s, as they were viewed as threats to the environment.

He said things escalated to a point where in 1983 they were declared invasive plants. As a result, new ones could not be planted and those already planted had to be left to die of natural causes.

As matters stand, those trees that die of natural causes are replaced and those that have to make way for development are replanted elsewhere in the city.

METRO

en-za

2021-10-16T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-10-16T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://pretorianews.pressreader.com/article/281689733001484

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