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380-yr old Chinar tree in Kashmir valley can be located while using QR Code

'It's the oldest chinar here but now its trunk is shrinking due to soil not being put around its roots methodically...'
10:51 AM Sep 04, 2024 IST | GK Web Desk
380 yr old chinar tree in kashmir valley can be located while using qr code
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Srinagar, Sep 03: A 380-year old Chinar tree located in famous Mughal Garden, Nishat Bagh on the banks of Dal Lake can be located through QR Code.

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In a latest development, one just has to follow Google to locate Chinar trees in Kashmir Valley.
A national media house NDTV has tracked an old Chinar tree to Nishat Bagh where it has been standing tall for the last 380 years.

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Pertinently Chinar has stood testimony to the ever-changing history in Jammu Kashmir for so many decades. But over the years their numbers have been drastically decreasing. And now to keep the numbers from further decreasing, the Jammu and Kashmir administration has started geo-tagging them.

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"It's the oldest chinar here but now its trunk is shrinking due to soil not being put around its roots methodically," one of the gardeners told NDTV.

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According to him, as many as 145 chinars are there in Nishat Bagh alone. "Some of them are dying and it's sad that the government is planting other trees around here," he stated adding that the adjacent Mughal garden has about 185 trees and it's the same story there too.

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Recently, the forest research department also conducted a census of chinars in Kashmir wherein it was discovered that the oldest chinar is in Chadoora in central Kashimr’s Budgam district.

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As per census numbers, fifty years ago there were about 42,000 chinars in the valley but now less than 20,000 are there. Out of them, one-third are either diseased or damaged.

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Following this, the government also took a programme of conservation of chinars. "Three of four chinars were damaged in the 2014 flood under this programme we transplanted three trees," a senior officer explains.

According to him, although chinar belongs to Greece, as per history it was introduced in the valley from Persia. "Later Mughal rulers treated it as a royal tree and planted them everywhere in the valley," he said adding that as as many as 1,100 were planted by Mughals in Naseem Bagh at the site of Kashmir University.

Dogra rulers also preserved the heritage and declared chinar as government property. In fact, cutting a chinar was declared a crime. But locals say, in the name of development and broadening of roads, many have been cut in the last few years.

"Almost 75 chinars were cut to broaden Srinagar Qazigund highway," said one shikarawala.
As per census records, the maximum number of chinars, apart from Srinagar, can be found in Bijbhera, Budgam, Kokeenag and in Anantnag.

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