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The personal log of Peter Payne, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Monday, March 31, 2008

The Season of the Sakura has come to Japan

The Season of the Sakura has come to Japan, and all throughout the country cherry trees are exploding like beautiful fireworks. One of my favorite Japanese traditions is hanami or flower viewing, which usually involves spreading a tarp under the cherry trees and having a party with your friends, drinking lots of beer and sake while the petals fall all around you. Flower viewing has been popular in Japan since the beginning of its written history, with the first hanami recorded in the Nara period (710-784), although the word initially applied to viewing of ume or plum flowers, which are also pretty. (Flower viewing is also mentioned in the Tale of Genji.) Because the window for cherry blossom season is so narrow -- in another week the sakura will have been scattered to the four winds -- it can be difficult for people living outside Japan to plan a visit, as unseasonably colder or warmer weather can move cherry blossom viewing season up or down in the calendar. Fortunately, Japan is oriented quite vertically, so if the cherry blossom season has ended in the Tokyo area, for example, you can travel farther north and catch the flowers at their best in some other part of the country. If you're not lucky enough to be in Japan during this time of year, maybe you can still enjoy Japanese cherry blossoms, as many cities (Washington D.C., Philadelphia, Vancouver) have great spots for viewing sakura, too.

8 Comments:

Blogger Peter in Japan said...

I hope I can convince my wife to go this year. She's usually so nonchalant about stuff in Japan, being Japanese herself.

11:06 PM

 
Blogger ac said...

that surprises me. everyone around me (fukushima-ken) seems to be freaking out about the blossoms and claim it is something i could never understand. i figured all japanese coveted this event. TV showed clips of D.C. and it seems other sakura hotspots could learn how to have a proper hanami. more picnics and drunken merriment, please. :)

10:35 AM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Well, there are "ten people, ten colors" as they say in Japan, i.e. different strokes for different folks, and my wife is one of those "you know, Europe is really the best place in the world" Japanese people, with the U.S. coming in a close second. Just as I wouldn't get so excited over something I could do every day in the U.S. because it's "normal" she gets less excited about "normal" Japanese stuff than me. ^_^ Plus she hates crowds with a passion, which is what you get a hanami.

12:28 PM

 
Blogger PeterD said...

In the places in the States, you can see the cherry blossoms, but usually can't get the spread the tarp and have a party experience, with public drinking being frowned on and all.

3:23 AM

 
Blogger ac said...

that's true about open containers. however, in places like chicago, when summer finally arrives and the festivals begin, neighborhoods pull together to have legal areas of drinking. not that i was implying this is the most important part. i'm contented to sit with my friends/family and enjoy the brevity of life.

9:45 AM

 
Blogger Dan/NJ said...

...or NEWARK, NEW JERSEY!

Branch Brook Park is ... located in the North Ward of Newark. The park is noted for its 2,700 cherry trees, collectively called Cherryblossomland, as well as its spectacular Cherry Blossom Festival each April. (from Wikipedia)

1:12 PM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Bummer about no open liquor. Japan is a lot less stressed about alcohol (and sex, and a few other things). Maybe that's why they live so long...

4:04 PM

 
Blogger courtney said...

...and Seattle too! There have been at least a couple occasions in which Seattle was gifted with seedlings and/or trees for various reasons. In one instance citizens of Seattle responded with aid to earthquake victims in Tokyo (1923, I believe)and in return received a (beautiful!) stone lantern. To commemorate that gift the Seattle Japanese Community donated 3,500 cherry trees to Seattle. Also, former Japanese PM Takeo Miki gifted Seattle with 1,000 cherry trees, and that was the beginning of the Seattle Cherry Blossom and Japanese Cultural Festival! It's so lovely to walk around this city and see so many beautiful cherry trees...

1:35 AM

 

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