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Colombia’s Largest Tree Is So Big in Diameter, It Has Grown Pillars to Support Its Branches

 

What’s the biggest tree in the world? General Sherman is certainly at the top of contenders, but then look at this.





In the depths of Colombia’s Caribbean region, there is a tree some
mistakenly call ‘The Tree of Guacarí’, which was another enormous tree
in the same area, rather similar in looks to the tree we are presenting
now.












That tree, otherwise called the Samán of Guacarí, used to feature on Colombian 500 peso coins in the 90s. It was a Samanea saman, also sometimes known as a rain tree, and was cut down in 1989 as its thick branches began to detach.

 

But the tree this article is about is different. It’s not another iconic Samanea saman, even though it really looks like it. No, it’s actually a Ficus,
commonly known as fig tree – the popular ornamental plant you will find
in gardens and homes all around the globe. And it has grown huge.





Regarded as Columbia’s largest tree, the gigantic fig is so huge, in
fact, that from a distance you could mistake it for a hill. Indeed, as
you approach it, you get the sensation of being dwarfed until you feel
really tiny. That’s just natural, though, as this giant is allegedly 30
meters high and 75 meters in diameter (we couldn’t find decisive proof
but the images seem to underline this.)












The tree has an incredibly beautiful foliage that looks like a green
mountain, with branches that kiss the ground as if paying homage to
Mother Earth. And not only do they kiss the earth, but they function as
supports that the tree itself has generated, from aerial roots coming
from the branches furthest from the trunk.

 

A wonderful sight indeed. Under this colossal tree, one has the
sensation of being in the basement of a great building, with many
columns that support the giant mass, Viajar en Verano
reports. Some people in Latin America call it ‘The Tree That Walks”,
because of its ‘feet’ with which it ensures its expansion. Indeed, the
pillars it has grown are like limbs through which it advances to cover a
larger area with its branches to receive the sun’s rays more directly
or find more fertile land to feed on.





Even more interestingly, the Tree of San Marcos is not a tree. It’s several trees.

 

Historian Raúl Ospino Rangel gives a splandid description of how the green mass was formed.





It all started when in 1964 the owner of the Alejandría farm wanted
to protect a yellow cedar tree that he had planted. They placed six fig
tree rods around the sapling to prevent the cattle from damaging the
young cedar.






But the opposite happened: instead of giving security to the cedar
tree, the fig tree struts sprouted buds and then branches, which
eventually ended up absorbing and devouring the yellow cedar.

 

So the ‘Giant Fig of San Marcos’ is not just one, but six different
plants that were joined and strengthened by aerial roots with which they
formed supports on the ground.





If you ever happen to travel to the Atlantic coast of Colombia, be
sure to visit San Marcos and let yourself be embraced by the shadowy
extremities of ‘The Most Beautiful Tree in Colombia’. You will
definitely see it from afar – about three kilometers before entering the
Alejandría farm, you can get the first glimpse of the gigantic ‘green
mountain’.

Protected by the branches of this tree, one feels small, but also
enriched by its powerful energy. Let’s hope it will stand for a long
time to come.

 

 Source: Earthly Mission

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