The Prague Post - Colombia's Inirida flower: from 'weed' to emblem for UN meeting

EUR -
AED 4.148186
AFN 80.743629
ALL 98.324353
AMD 440.674954
ANG 2.035451
AOA 1034.502195
ARS 1328.397425
AUD 1.768817
AWG 2.035688
AZN 1.920649
BAM 1.949937
BBD 2.287243
BDT 137.636148
BGN 1.949156
BHD 0.427329
BIF 3315.827828
BMD 1.129369
BND 1.480037
BOB 7.827464
BRL 6.414248
BSD 1.132804
BTN 95.733144
BWP 15.507235
BYN 3.707186
BYR 22135.635362
BZD 2.275478
CAD 1.563866
CDF 3244.677471
CHF 0.936922
CLF 0.027893
CLP 1070.371303
CNY 8.212038
CNH 8.21982
COP 4742.040366
CRC 572.174488
CUC 1.129369
CUP 29.928283
CVE 109.934443
CZK 24.936808
DJF 200.710921
DKK 7.46334
DOP 66.668946
DZD 150.375728
EGP 57.575469
ERN 16.940537
ETB 152.020822
FJD 2.551753
FKP 0.846646
GBP 0.850144
GEL 3.100127
GGP 0.846646
GHS 16.142462
GIP 0.846646
GMD 80.746292
GNF 9811.411636
GTQ 8.723769
GYD 237.715225
HKD 8.76046
HNL 29.396479
HRK 7.533005
HTG 147.987162
HUF 404.508387
IDR 18762.209707
ILS 4.083155
IMP 0.846646
INR 95.654348
IQD 1483.695701
IRR 47560.558343
ISK 145.699584
JEP 0.846646
JMD 179.329987
JOD 0.800947
JPY 164.364975
KES 146.637135
KGS 98.762857
KHR 4534.125659
KMF 490.707185
KPW 1016.445089
KRW 1621.073777
KWD 0.346154
KYD 0.943907
KZT 581.227125
LAK 24491.574257
LBP 101499.205367
LKR 339.103368
LRD 226.558771
LSL 21.093262
LTL 3.334734
LVL 0.683145
LYD 6.183462
MAD 10.50223
MDL 19.444705
MGA 5029.875894
MKD 61.582393
MMK 2371.153663
MNT 4036.808532
MOP 9.049407
MRU 44.914954
MUR 50.911786
MVR 17.403731
MWK 1964.293654
MXN 22.141172
MYR 4.889808
MZN 72.279156
NAD 21.089632
NGN 1814.162101
NIO 41.684292
NOK 11.796481
NPR 153.17343
NZD 1.9103
OMR 0.436436
PAB 1.132794
PEN 4.153411
PGK 4.625052
PHP 63.118191
PKR 318.286758
PLN 4.286
PYG 9072.799745
QAR 4.128785
RON 4.97724
RSD 116.829573
RUB 92.878051
RWF 1627.299742
SAR 4.23569
SBD 9.442992
SCR 16.127763
SDG 678.187182
SEK 11.021847
SGD 1.481279
SHP 0.887507
SLE 25.738623
SLL 23682.288075
SOS 647.350645
SRD 41.613833
STD 23375.661241
SVC 9.910577
SYP 14684.48745
SZL 21.074632
THB 37.879183
TJS 11.939599
TMT 3.952792
TND 3.364384
TOP 2.645097
TRY 43.566507
TTD 7.671676
TWD 36.285386
TZS 3031.319372
UAH 46.992963
UGX 4149.522988
USD 1.129369
UYU 47.666673
UZS 14648.554372
VES 97.959187
VND 29369.244775
VUV 136.184503
WST 3.132033
XAF 653.987659
XAG 0.034817
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.052176
XDR 0.816428
XOF 653.996319
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.639034
ZAR 20.951458
ZMK 10165.679641
ZMW 31.520502
ZWL 363.656406
  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.26

    -0.18%

  • JRI

    0.1000

    13.01

    +0.77%

  • BCC

    -0.5700

    92.71

    -0.61%

  • RIO

    -0.8500

    58.55

    -1.45%

  • BTI

    -0.2500

    43.3

    -0.58%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    22.03

    +0.09%

  • GSK

    -1.1000

    38.75

    -2.84%

  • SCS

    -0.0500

    9.87

    -0.51%

  • RBGPF

    67.2100

    67.21

    +100%

  • NGG

    -1.3500

    71.65

    -1.88%

  • BCE

    -0.8100

    21.44

    -3.78%

  • RELX

    -0.5500

    54.08

    -1.02%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    10.12

    -0.99%

  • BP

    0.4200

    27.88

    +1.51%

  • AZN

    -1.2800

    70.51

    -1.82%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    9.73

    -0.31%

Colombia's Inirida flower: from 'weed' to emblem for UN meeting
Colombia's Inirida flower: from 'weed' to emblem for UN meeting / Photo: Luis ACOSTA - AFP

Colombia's Inirida flower: from 'weed' to emblem for UN meeting

When Ruben Dario Carianil began cultivating the unusual, pointy Inirida flower in the Colombian Amazon ten years ago, his relatives made fun of him for growing "weeds."

Text size:

Today, the 63-year-old Carianil, of the Curripako tribe, grows tons of the curious blooms on a plot outside Inirida -- the jungle city of 30,000 people from which the flower took its name.

Carianil exports Inirida cuttings to the United States, Europe and Asia, and soon even more foreigners will be introduced to the rare blossom as the emblem of a UN biodiversity conference to be held in Cali from October 21 to November 1.

"I'm very happy," Carianil told AFP of his success, which he sees as helping, not harming, the environment.

"For us, Nature, the forest, is life. We Indigenous people respect it and we live in harmony with Nature without damaging it."

Inirida flowers once grew abundantly in the wild in the region. Over-picking led to a dramatic reduction and the government in 1989 prohibited harvesting.

The ban remained in place until 2005, when the door was opened for Inirida's commercial cultivation as long as wild populations remained untouched.

So far, only Carianil's farm has managed to grow, and get a licence to market, the red flowers with their hard, spikey, finger-like petals.

He was helped in the domestication process by biologist Mateo Fernandez.

At first, Carianil's blooms sold at the local airport, then in the Colombian capital Bogota some 700 kilometers (about 430 miles) away, then further afield.

In 2022, the first box of Inirida blooms was delivered to China from Colombia, one of the world's top flower growers and exporters.

- 'Eternal flowers' -

Carianil runs the business with his wife Martha Toledo and their children.

On a plot of some 20 hectares (49 acres), the Inirida crops share space with a variety of native shrubs and even a patch of undisturbed forest.

From the air, the farm looks very different from the flower plantations abundant in Colombia's Andean regions with their rows upon rows of monoculture, often in plastic greenhouses.

Fertilizers and pesticides are banned on Carianil's farm, and only Indigenous farming methods used.

"When you buy a flower from Inirida, you take a piece of the jungle home with you," said Toledo.

They call the enterprise "Liwi: Eternal flowers" as the buds retain their shape years after being cut, even when dried.

It is this longevity that inspired the choice of the Inirida as the logo for the 16th meeting of the Conference of Parties (COP16) of the Convention on Biological Diversity.

"This is a flower that never dies, its petals never fall apart. We hope that the COP16 in Colombia can help the world to make peace with Nature, so that we can sustain and maintain life on the planet forever," says Environment Minister Susana Muhamad.

The flower is native to Colombia's eastern Guainia department, of which Inirida is the capital, and a part of the neighboring Venezuelan Amazon.

E.Soukup--TPP