Rio de Janeiro — Towering talipot palms in a Rio de Janeiro park are flowering for the first and only time in their lives, decades after famed Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx introduced them in the 1960s.
Towards the end of its life — which can span between 40 and 80 years — the palm tree sends up a central plume crowded with millions of small, creamy-white blossoms that rise high above its fan-shaped leaves.
The rare phenomenon that ties past to present has sparked the curiosity of passersby in Flamengo Park who stop, crane their necks to admire them and take photos.
Vinicius Vanni, a 42-year-old civil engineer, was even hoping to collect seedlings and plant them.
“I probably won’t see them flower, but they’ll be there for future generations,” he said from Flamengo P

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