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Tokyo cherry blossoms bloom earlier than other Japan regions

Tokyo cherry blossoms bloom earlier than other Japan regions

Independent24-03-2025

Cherry trees in Tokyo have begun to bloom in stunning shades of pink, marking the onset of spring in Japan.
Tokyo cherry blossoms were forecast to come into bloom earlier than any other region of the country for the second consecutive year.
At least six cherry blossom buds opened up on the specimen tree in Sannomaru at the Kochi Castle in the southwest of the country, Japan Meteorological Agency said.
This Somei-Yoshino cherry blossom tree is the official marker for declaring the start of the sakura or the cherry blossom season each year, which draws thousands of tourists from across the world.
Kumamoto city declared the blooming of cherry blossoms three days earlier than last year but a day later than average, according to reports.
Japan usually sees the peak cherry blossom season in March and April when the streets of its major cities are adorned by beautiful pink and white flowers.
But temperatures on Sunday reached levels for late April to mid-June in many parts of Japan, with a high-pressure system covering most parts of the country, the weather agency said. Many areas of Japan recorded temperatures of more than 25C or higher, which the agency defines as a summer day.
The daytime temperature soared to 26.8C in Tsuyama City in Okayama Prefecture, making it the highest temperature for March since the weather agency began record-taking in 1943.
This year's cherry blossom season began five days earlier than 2024, and the trees are expected to be in full bloom by the end of the week.
Climate crisis and urban warming have been impacting the flowering dates of cherry blossoms in Japan. Last year, the cherry blossoms bloomed early in February with streets in Kawazu already been covered with pink flowers.
In 2023, the iconic blossoms appeared ten days earlier than usual and tied with an early record set in 2020 and 2021 for the earliest bloom date since the records began in 1950s.
In Japan, forecasts for cherry blossom bloom are an integral part of the country's spring celebrations. The government has set a standard for observing cherry blossom trees and has been forecasting the annual bloom since 1955.
According to the rules, once five or six flowers have opened on the branches of the tree, it's considered to be blossoming. Once 80 per cent of the tree has flowered, it's deemed to be in full bloom.
Why is the sakura season important?
The sakura or cherry blossom season does not just hold cultural significance, but it's also a major tourist attraction.
An estimated 63 million people travel to Japan to see the cherry blossoms, spending around $2.7bn in the process, according to a 2019 estimate from Kansai University. In March 2024, a record 3.1 million tourists visited Japan during the spring season, a 70 per cent increase from the previous year.
The flowers are loved by people in Japan as much as the tourists, who flock to parks to hold picnics to view and photograph the blossoms. Stores in Japan stock their shelves with flower-themed or favoured items such as pink sakura drinks, cakes and even lunch boxes.
The Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka Circuit will be held in the first week of April, when the fast-corner track will be adorned with blooming cherry blossoms. The race last year drew about 222,000 fans from Japan and across the world.
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by F1 Japanese Grand Prix (Suzuka Circuit) (@f1japanesegp)
When will the blossoms completely bloom this year?
The timing of the sakura season varies in Japan by region, beginning from late March and extending till the end of April.
This year, blooms are expected to appear in Hiroshima and Kochi in western Japan and Miyazaki in southwestern Japan this week. It will be followed by Yokohama and in the southwestern Japanese cities of Fukuoka, Saga and Nagasaki.
In northeastern Japan, the flowers are forecast to bloom by mid-April and Hokkaido will be the last to witness the pink in late April.
How to enjoy the blossoms
Grab some drinks, food and a blue tarpaulin picnic sheet, and do a spot of hanami. Literally meaning 'flower viewing', hanami are the picnics and parties held in cherry blossom spots, which can range from a mellow afternoon with family in the local park to sake-fuelled parties with colleagues.
Ueno Park in Tokyo is in the latter category, a sea of picnic sheets under an expanse of billowing blossom. By nightfall, the park will be littered with passed-out hanami casualties. Tokyo's Shinjuku Gyoen Park is far calmer, as there's an admission fee and no-alcohol policy for anyone who wants to relax amid the 1,300 multi-varied blossoms spread across its lawns and gardens.
The Imperial Palace's Edo-era Chidiorgafuchi moat, however, can stake a strong claim as the most attractive blossom spot in the capital, its banks bursting with pink. A top hanami spot at night is the hip Nakameguro neighbourhood, where blossoms, paper lanterns and food and drink trucks line the concrete banks of the Meguro River.

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The spring blossom fad has taken a dark turn
The spring blossom fad has taken a dark turn

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April 'hath put a spirit of youth in everything', wrote Shakespeare in Sonnet 98, the Bard's lament on being parted from a lover at the time of spring's annual bursting forth in flower. At my back doorstep in Lewes, from where a magnificent wisteria blossom spreads, this seasonal spirit of youth is expressed in a queue of Instagrammers queuing up to stage a selfie beneath the pale lilac clusters. My fresh moment of floral fame comes a few weeks after visiting Japanese selfie-snappers flocked to our cherry tree, as it put on a particularly fine show of pillowy pink blooms. The blossom hunters have been drawn like bees to nectar, and they've driven me somewhat mad. As is the case every spring, Instagram is awash with blossom shots: young women in pastel tea dresses backdropped by cherry trees, couples in romantic poses on park benches, even bikini-wearing models pouting as they fondle gravid branches. Blossom influencers such as gay Instagrammer Carlos (who posts under @ twinktraveller) and Nuria Frances (@nuriatravels) have directed enthusiasts to the best spots for floral selfies in posts such as Nuria's 'Spring Blossoms Norwich Guide' (Dowding Road, Old Catton; Christ Church, New Catton; and St Peter Mancroft Church get top billing for blooms in the Norfolk city, in case you're wondering). View this post on Instagram A post shared by Nuria L Frances 🌺 Norwich, Norfolk & London (@nuriatravels) The trend took off during the first Covid lockdown – that surreally warm and blue-skied spring of 2020 – and is a transplant from Japan. There, hanami or 'flower-viewing' season runs from the end of March to May. Its onus is on enjoying the transient beauty of flowers, chiefly the blossoms of the cherry tree, but also the white or light-pink blossoms of plum tree varietals. The blossom forecast (sakura-zensen, or 'cherry blossom front') is announced each year by the Japan Meteorological Agency and watched carefully by those planning their hanami. Each year hundreds of thousands of Japanese descend on Okinawa to witness the early blossom season on the island, which begins in January and features Kanhizakura cherry blossoms, known for their deep pink hue. Back in Blighty, on March 20, The National Trust urged Britons to 'take a blossom break' in the sixth iteration of the heritage organisation's # blossomwatch campaign, which is inspired by hanami and offers plans for 'days out in blossom' and a five-minute, guided 'blossom meditation'. Blossom, it claims, boosts many people's spirits and a new YouGov poll conducted for The National Trust found that almost all UK adults (94 per cent) said the sight of blossoms on trees and in hedgerows made them happy. But the blossom fad has taken a darker turn. Recent years have seen a surge in vandalism of cherry trees across the UK, with branches being cut at the point of blooming, often to sell on in a clandestine floristry blackmarket that furnishes (unwitting) spring weddings and posh events with cheerful blooms. On April 15, police called for witnesses to the theft of a blossoming cherry tree from the village of Carnon Downs in Cornwall, which had been planted by the Parish Council and sponsored by local residents. On April 21, Llangefni resident Lauren Roberts complained of having her front garden cherry tree 'literally yanked out of ground ' by vandals in the Anglesey county town. In a sad case in northwest London, a bereaved father announced that a rank of cherry trees planted as a memorial to his deceased son had had their branches brutally lopped off under the cover of night. And on March 11, volunteers planted five new cherry trees in Brighton's Preston Park to replace trees vandalised last spring. 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Watch live: Tokyo crowd gathers to see cherry blossoms before full bloom
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Tokyo cherry blossoms bloom earlier than other Japan regions
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Cherry trees in Tokyo have begun to bloom in stunning shades of pink, marking the onset of spring in Japan. Tokyo cherry blossoms were forecast to come into bloom earlier than any other region of the country for the second consecutive year. At least six cherry blossom buds opened up on the specimen tree in Sannomaru at the Kochi Castle in the southwest of the country, Japan Meteorological Agency said. This Somei-Yoshino cherry blossom tree is the official marker for declaring the start of the sakura or the cherry blossom season each year, which draws thousands of tourists from across the world. Kumamoto city declared the blooming of cherry blossoms three days earlier than last year but a day later than average, according to reports. Japan usually sees the peak cherry blossom season in March and April when the streets of its major cities are adorned by beautiful pink and white flowers. But temperatures on Sunday reached levels for late April to mid-June in many parts of Japan, with a high-pressure system covering most parts of the country, the weather agency said. Many areas of Japan recorded temperatures of more than 25C or higher, which the agency defines as a summer day. The daytime temperature soared to 26.8C in Tsuyama City in Okayama Prefecture, making it the highest temperature for March since the weather agency began record-taking in 1943. This year's cherry blossom season began five days earlier than 2024, and the trees are expected to be in full bloom by the end of the week. Climate crisis and urban warming have been impacting the flowering dates of cherry blossoms in Japan. Last year, the cherry blossoms bloomed early in February with streets in Kawazu already been covered with pink flowers. In 2023, the iconic blossoms appeared ten days earlier than usual and tied with an early record set in 2020 and 2021 for the earliest bloom date since the records began in 1950s. In Japan, forecasts for cherry blossom bloom are an integral part of the country's spring celebrations. The government has set a standard for observing cherry blossom trees and has been forecasting the annual bloom since 1955. According to the rules, once five or six flowers have opened on the branches of the tree, it's considered to be blossoming. Once 80 per cent of the tree has flowered, it's deemed to be in full bloom. Why is the sakura season important? The sakura or cherry blossom season does not just hold cultural significance, but it's also a major tourist attraction. An estimated 63 million people travel to Japan to see the cherry blossoms, spending around $2.7bn in the process, according to a 2019 estimate from Kansai University. In March 2024, a record 3.1 million tourists visited Japan during the spring season, a 70 per cent increase from the previous year. The flowers are loved by people in Japan as much as the tourists, who flock to parks to hold picnics to view and photograph the blossoms. Stores in Japan stock their shelves with flower-themed or favoured items such as pink sakura drinks, cakes and even lunch boxes. The Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka Circuit will be held in the first week of April, when the fast-corner track will be adorned with blooming cherry blossoms. The race last year drew about 222,000 fans from Japan and across the world. View this post on Instagram A post shared by F1 Japanese Grand Prix (Suzuka Circuit) (@f1japanesegp) When will the blossoms completely bloom this year? The timing of the sakura season varies in Japan by region, beginning from late March and extending till the end of April. This year, blooms are expected to appear in Hiroshima and Kochi in western Japan and Miyazaki in southwestern Japan this week. It will be followed by Yokohama and in the southwestern Japanese cities of Fukuoka, Saga and Nagasaki. In northeastern Japan, the flowers are forecast to bloom by mid-April and Hokkaido will be the last to witness the pink in late April. How to enjoy the blossoms Grab some drinks, food and a blue tarpaulin picnic sheet, and do a spot of hanami. Literally meaning 'flower viewing', hanami are the picnics and parties held in cherry blossom spots, which can range from a mellow afternoon with family in the local park to sake-fuelled parties with colleagues. Ueno Park in Tokyo is in the latter category, a sea of picnic sheets under an expanse of billowing blossom. By nightfall, the park will be littered with passed-out hanami casualties. Tokyo's Shinjuku Gyoen Park is far calmer, as there's an admission fee and no-alcohol policy for anyone who wants to relax amid the 1,300 multi-varied blossoms spread across its lawns and gardens. The Imperial Palace's Edo-era Chidiorgafuchi moat, however, can stake a strong claim as the most attractive blossom spot in the capital, its banks bursting with pink. A top hanami spot at night is the hip Nakameguro neighbourhood, where blossoms, paper lanterns and food and drink trucks line the concrete banks of the Meguro River.

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