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:
-
Castilla-La Mancha, Spain
-
Bluespotted ribbontail ray
-
Porto, Portugal
-
Speed skaters in the Gangneung Oval, Pyeongchang, South Korea
-
National Cherry Blossom Festival
-
World Book Day
-
Fall Astronomy Week
-
Seville celebrates first world tour
-
Waiting for the perfect shot
-
Megalong Valley, Blue Mountains National Park, Australia
-
Big-wave hunters watch Nazaré
-
National Fossil Day
-
Fall comes to the Last Frontier
-
Happy New Year!
-
Pretty, pretty…butterfly?
-
Arambol Beach, Goa, India
-
Splendid leaf frog
-
Spring comes to the Palouse
-
The city of Osaka at night, Japan
-
International Day of the Worlds Indigenous Peoples
-
Daylight saving time begins
-
Square Tower House in Mesa Verde National Park
-
Darwin Day
-
Southern right whales sail home to South Africa
-
Piazza IX Aprile, Taormina, Sicily, Italy
-
Welcome to the Year of the Pig
-
Black History Month
-
Celebrating World Wildlife Day
-
Welcome to El Cervantino
-
Carlsbad Caverns National Park in New Mexico
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

