Botanically, the Kurinji’s synchronized blooming (technically called mast seeding ) is a survival strategy to overwhelm predators. In 2018, it succeeded spectacularly. The hills hummed with bees, butterflies, and the clicks of a million cameras.
If you missed the 2018 bloom, the next one is due in . But for those who witnessed Munnar that August, the memory remains etched like the purple hue itself—rare, fragile, and unforgettable. Fun Fact: The Kurinji flower dies after seeding, meaning the plant that bloomed in 2018 no longer exists. But its seeds live on, waiting for 2030. munnar kurinji flowers 2018
For the local , the 2018 bloom was not just a tourist attraction but a celestial calendar. Their ancestors have long used the Kurinji's lifecycle to measure age and time—twelve blooms marking a lifetime. If you missed the 2018 bloom, the next one is due in
However, the 2018 bloom was bittersweet. While it drew lakhs of mesmerized tourists from across the globe, Munnar was also recovering from the devastating floods that had struck Kerala just weeks earlier. The flowers became a symbol of resilience—a silent, healing purple wave that reminded everyone of nature's cyclical promise of renewal. But its seeds live on, waiting for 2030
Once every twelve years, the lush green hills of Munnar in Kerala, India, trade their emerald cloak for a breathtaking blanket of violet-blue. In 2018, nature unfolded one of its rarest spectacles: the mass blooming of the Neelakurinji ( Strobilanthes kunthiana ).
The year 2018 was particularly significant for Munnar. It marked the end of a long wait that began in 2006. By August and September, slopes like , Koviloor , and Lakkam Waterfalls transformed into undulating purple carpets. The hills, which give the region its name ('Neelam' meaning blue), finally lived up to their poetic identity as the 'Blue Mountains.'