Planting a Kovidar: A Quiet Act of Revival
Soil, spacing, sunlight — and the older reasons why Indian households once kept a Kovidar in the courtyard.
Why plant one
In the old courtyards of Ayodhya, Mathura and Varanasi, a flowering tree was never an ornament alone. It was, in a soft sense, a household deity — a marker of the family's place within a larger order. Planting a Kovidar today is to lay a small tile in a very old mosaic.
How to plant
- Choose a spot with full sun and well-drained soil
- Dig a pit 60 × 60 × 60 cm; mix compost and a handful of neem cake
- Plant the sapling with the root collar at soil level
- Mulch and water deeply every 3 days for the first month
First-year care
Kovidar is forgiving once established. Water weekly through the first summer. Prune lightly in the monsoon to encourage a well-shaped canopy. By year three, it will flower — and each February will arrive with colour before leaf, before speech, before the hot winds start.