Here There and Everywhere

Expat wanderer

Kuwait Green

There is a miracle in Kuwait. Suddenly, there are trees a bright, Easter-basket-grass green.

“What kind of miracle is that?” you might ask, you who live in other climates.

That bright spring-green is a miracle in a land where the true blue of the blue sky is often screened with haze, where the dominant color is a white beige sand, and, most important of all, where there has not been a truly significant rain the entire rainy season here.

The color is painfully beautiful, the eye seeks it out and feasts on its vibrancy in an otherwise dull landscape. The tree that is showing the vibrant green is a little willowy, graceful. The green is probably only for a day or two before it fades into a duller green – still welcome because it IS green.

00kuwaitgreen.jpg

The second tree is my favorite tree in Kuwait, but I don’t have a single Kuwaiti friend who can tell me what it is. They tell me it is a very old tree, a tree that can live a long time on very little water, a tree often used to screen houses and provide both shade and privacy. I love the laciness on its leaves, the delicacy of its foliage. In contrast to the spring-green tree, the foliage is a more grey-blue-green, and it is a much taller tree. There is a delicacy about this tree, an elegant restraint and a timelessness that fascinates me. If I were Kuwaiti, if I had my own compound, I would grow this tree, I would grow many of them and watch their lacy branches sway in the slightest breeze.

00favoritekuwaittree.jpg

Can someone tell me the names for these trees?

(PS I had to look up it – it’s + Possessive to be sure I got it right, above. I didn’t get it right at first, but it is right now. If you have any confusion, don’t be alarmed – it confuses all of us. If you click on the blue type, there is a very simple way to remember when to use it and when to use it’s.)

April 1, 2008 - Posted by | ExPat Life, Kuwait, Living Conditions, Random Musings, Technical Issue, Weather | , ,

8 Comments »

  1. ” Suddenly, there are trees a bright, Easter basket grass green.”
    Blow me down, Seattle mama! Is this your version of Lipra Loof?

    arrested development's avatar Comment by arrested development | April 1, 2008 | Reply

  2. I think the second pic is for a type of Acacia tree.

    ???'s avatar Comment by ??? | April 1, 2008 | Reply

  3. The first photo is not too clear but it looks like “siffsaf”

    The tree in the second photo is “athal”

    Both kinds of trees thrive in Kuwait’s arid desert environment.

    Trees in Kuwait always experience a growth surge during the warmer/hotter months.

    jewaira's avatar Comment by jewaira | April 1, 2008 | Reply

  4. Don’t even get me started on how green Kuwait’s become lately. I miss Abu Dhabi.

    A Spot of Abu Dhabi in Kuwait's avatar Comment by A Spot of Abu Dhabi in Kuwait | April 2, 2008 | Reply

  5. I confess, Arrested, I had to look it up. There are references to an artificial turf called Lipra Loof, a portable satellite, a politician in India, a soccer coach and several bloggers. To which are you referring?

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | April 2, 2008 | Reply

  6. ??? – I think the first is a kind of very fast growing tree – might be in the acacia family – and its roots spread far and wide underground, destroying sewer lines and anything else they contact!

    Thank you, Jewaira. I truly love the “athal” and it seems to grow where nothing else can grow. And it seems to be able to grow for a long time.

    Spot – There are REAL trees in Abu Dhabi? šŸ˜‰

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | April 2, 2008 | Reply

  7. […] https://intlxpatr.wordpress.com/ 2008/ 04/ 01/ kuwait-green/ […]

    Pingback by grow taller gain height » Blog Archive » grow taller | April 2, 2008 | Reply

  8. Hubby thinks the first one is a Mesquite tree šŸ™‚

    Nicole's avatar Comment by Nicole | April 9, 2008 | Reply


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