The quiver trees pictured on our homepage are uniquely suited to Namibia"s hot, dry climate. They are not trees at all, but an endangered species of aloe plant. These succulents can grow up to 30 feet tall and live for 200 years. The name comes from the Indigenous San people who made quivers out of the plant"s tube-shaped branches to hold their arrows while hunting. You can see scattered quiver trees across southern Namibia, but for sheer numbers, head to the Quiver Tree Forest, where more than 200 of these distinctive plants grow among dolerite rock formations outside the city of Keetmanshoop. In June and July, during Namibia"s winter, you can see the plant"s flowers in bright, yellow bloom.
Quiver trees in Namibia
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Hemingway’s Keys
-
A grand event
-
Chapel of St. Michel on Lake Serre-Ponçon, Hautes-Alpes, France
-
High tide at the walled city
-
Paleontology meets art
-
Aït Benhaddou, Morocco
-
The Christmas Bird Count begins
-
A medieval Moorish gem
-
Clouds over the River of Grass
-
A universe underground
-
International Day for Biosphere Reserves
-
Kissing Day
-
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, California
-
World Turtle Day
-
Exploring the wilder side of New York
-
Fiddlehead fern fronds
-
Shark Awareness Day
-
Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee
-
Brown-throated three-toed sloth in cecropia tree, Costa Rica
-
Red deer stag in De Hoge Veluwe National Park, Netherlands
-
Are you older than this lake?
-
Ski touring in Austria
-
White dunes, blue lagoons
-
Land ho in New Zealand 250 years ago
-
White trilliums blooming in Ontario, Canada
-
What a twist
-
World Meerkat Day
-
20 years later
-
Group of giant cuttlefish, Whyalla, South Australia
-
Angkor, Cambodia
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

