Indiana Public Media | WFIU - NPR | WTIU - PBS

Focus On Flowers

Hibiscus Heaven

<br />The national flower of both Jamaica and Malaysia is the hibiscus. I have never been to Jamaica, but in Kuala Lumpur I saw a magnificent public garden dedicated to displaying hundreds of species of this tropical flower. Of course, because it is so close to the equator, it is always summer in Malaysia and so hibiscus plants flower year round.

When I visited the hibiscus garden I was amazed to see the number of varieties that I had never seen anywhere else. There are even lamp posts in the city of KL, with the light on the top of the poles fashioned to look like huge red hibiscus blooms. In the public garden there were climbing hibiscus covering stucco walls, miniature hibiscus and some large hibiscus with the tiniest flowers imaginable, as well as bushes with huge flowers both single and double, in a range of delicious colors.

Similar colors and varieties were massed together in beds, but there were varied deigns that used combinations of plants to good effect. From the excellent descriptions that were provided I learned that many were native species but there were also some rare hybrids. The extensive garden had been terraced so that there were varied levels in the terrain and there were also fountains, pergolas and wide paths for visitors to stroll among the plantings. Since the temperatures never seem to go below 95 degrees F in that part of the world, I heard many European visitors exclaiming that it was hotter than hell. I felt that I was in Hibiscus heaven.

Staff in hotels in Kuala Lumpur will direct visitors to the famous Hibiscus Garden and the Orchid Garden which is next to it. Both can be seen in the same visit.

Photo by SARhounds

Moya Andrews

Moya Andrews, originally from Queensland, Australia, served as Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs and Dean of the Faculties at Indiana University until 2004. In the same year, Moya began hosting Focus on Flowers for WFIU. In addition, Moya does interviews for Profiles, is a member of the Bloomington Hospital Board, and authored Perennials Short and Tall from Indiana University Press.

View all posts by this author »

  • Jae Johnson
    Yes. I have to concur with the previous response. It definitely is the Lignum Vitae, not the hibiscus.
  • Jheanelle Soyibo
    The National Flower of Jamaica is not the hibiscus, it is the Lignum Vitae. Where did you get that information?
blog comments powered by Disqus

Stay Connected

What is RSS? RSS makes it possible to subscribe to a website's updates instead of visiting it by delivering new posts to your RSS reader automatically. Choose to receive some or all of the updates from Focus on Flowers:

Support Comes From

Most Popular

About Focus on Flowers

Focus on Flowers on Flickr