Big Tree in Chirinda Forest

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LocationZimbabwe
Height65 metres
Diameter4.5 metres
Big Tree in Chirinda Forest
Base of a large tree with buttress roots, much larger than the person sitting by it
LocationZimbabwe
Height65 metres
Diameter4.5 metres

Big Tree (or The Big Tree in Chirinda Forest) is the tallest indigenous tree in Zimbabwe, and a declared National Monument. The tree is around 65 metres tall and 4.5 metres wide.[1] Its age is approximately 1,000 years.[2] The tree is located in the centre of Chirinda Forest (formerly known as Selinda) in southeast Zimbabwe at the southernmost part of the country's Eastern Highlands. Big Tree is a Khaya anthotheca or Nyasa redwood tree (previously referred to as Khaya nyasica). In December 1986, it reached 65 metres tall[1] and 5.25 metres wide. The trunk is heavily buttressed at the base, which complicates measurement.

The Big Tree is protected within the Chirinda Forest Botanical Reserve, administered by Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Estate. It sustained damage from people carving their initials into it. The tree is suffering from some dieback, indicated by its declining height and the loss of its topmost branches, but as of April 2025 it appears in overall good health.[3] Whether the decline is due to human-related damage such as climate change or a natural process is unknown.

Other tall Khaya trees

See also

References

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