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Yishun sits within Singapore’s northern catchment area. Lower Seletar Reservoir isn’t just a scenic backdrop—it’s the district’s hydrological heart. Early mornings here, mist hovers over calm water, and kingfishers dive like silent arrows. The reservoir’s edges are lined with rain trees ( Samanea saman ), their umbrella canopies hosting nesting herons.

Underneath the HDB blocks lies marine clay and old alluvium —heavy, fertile, and quick to flood before drainage improved. Yishun is subtly hilly; Yishun Hill near Blk 700+ offers one of the few natural elevation points in northern SG, where you can feel the wind change direction before rain.

From May to August, the common palm civet calls—a throaty, rhythmic "khok-khok" echoing through estate trees. Crickets, of course. But also the low hum of toads from Yishun Pond , where rain lilies bloom overnight after a storm.

Yishun’s nature isn’t pristine or postcard-perfect. It’s resilient, scrubby, and alive—much like the stories told about it. Come not for the memes, but for the fig trees growing through drain grates , the otter slides at dawn , and the quiet wisdom of a place that refuses to be tamed.

Yishun’s northeastern edge brushes against the Mandai-Khatrit corridor , a green link of secondary forest. Walk along Milkweed Path (off Yishun Avenue 1), and you’ll hear banded woodpeckers chiseling dead albizia trees. At dusk, fruit bats glide between figs and rubber trees—remnants of 1960s kampung plantations.

Most people know Yishun for its viral memes or quirky headlines. But strip away the noise, and you’ll find a landscape quietly shaped by water, woodland, and wildlife.

Here’s a deep post exploring the natural characteristics and elements of Yishun, Singapore: Yishun: Where Raw Nature Meets Urban Rhythm

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