Touch the tree, and the tree speaks.
A living anatomy of Kovidar — Bauhinia variegata. Click on any part of the tree below to discover its botany, its place in Ayurveda, and its meaning in the Ramayana.
The Canopy
छत्रम् · वितानम्
The crown of Kovidar is wide and spreading, 10–12 metres tall, deciduous in the cool months and dense with leaves through the monsoon. It shelters a soft, dappled space below — a courtyard within the tree.
The Blossoms
पुष्पम्
Kovidar flowers in February. The blossoms come on bare branches before the new leaves — large, five-petalled, and slightly asymmetric, with one petal more pigmented than the rest as a nectar guide for pollinators.
The Bilobed Leaf
द्विदलीयं पत्रम्
The leaves are the tree’s signature: bilobed — two rounded halves joined at a central spine. Folk imagination calls it the camel’s footprint; Sanskrit poets called it yugma — the twinned.
The Bark
त्वक्
The bark of Kovidar is the most respected name in the materia medica of Indian glandular medicine. Pale grey-brown, with shallow irregular fissures, it has been gathered and prepared by vaidyas for over two millennia.
The Seed Pods
शिम्बी · बीजम्
The fruit of Kovidar is a flat, dehiscent legume pod, 15–30 cm long, containing 10–15 brown seeds. The pods ripen in May–June and split with a soft crack, scattering seeds onto the warming earth.
The Roots
मूलम्
Beneath the soil, Kovidar carries on one of the oldest collaborations in the plant world. As a member of the legume family, its roots form nodules where Rhizobium bacteria fix atmospheric nitrogen — a slow gift to the surrounding earth.
Letters from the Grove
Contemplative essays on Kovidar, the Ramayana, sacred ecology and Ayurveda — delivered once a month. No noise, only depth.
We write rarely, and always with intention.