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Showing posts with label cherry blossoms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cherry blossoms. Show all posts

Monday, April 14, 2025

I'm in the pink with Sakura

During the 桜 Sakura (cherry blossoms) season, I'm in the pink strolling through 
the graceful blossoms.
I have an emotional attachment to the  endearing nature of Sakura
as the epitome of transient beauty in this world.
Sakura's nickname is 夢見草, which literally means dream-viewing-flowers.
Sakura make me feel as if I were in a dream or conjure up the memories 
of my late families.

April 12th

Three Buddhist figures engraved on the stones are surrounded by Sakura 
in the small garden of  勧学院 Kangakuin, a place to learn anything about Buddhism 
at Todaiji Temple.

- 春日野園地  Kasugano-enchi, Nara Park -

Nara Park is a spacious area with parks, gardens, temples, shrines, cultural heritages,
museums, woods, brooks, ....and  local people's houses.
It is not so bustling with people like in Kyoto.
Visitors enjoy the beauty of the park interacting with free-roaming deer.

April 1st

This is Somei-yoshino variety with the backdrop of Camellias.



-茶山園地  Chayama-ench, Nara Park -

At the foot of the Mount Wakakusa, there is a small wooded hill.
It is a place to admire the double-flowered Nara-no-kokonoe-zakura, 
which is rare and endemic to Nara.
Nara-no-kokonoe-zakura blooms at almost the same time as the widely-planted
Somei-yoshino.
As you see in the photos above and below, the color of the Somei-yoshino is pale-pink
while that of the Nara-no-kokonoe-zakura is brighter.

Nara-no-kokonoe-zakura
April 8th


Clouds upon clouds of soft pink blossom floaitng over deer and people 
make magically serene pictures.









- 佐保川  Saho River -

April 9th

Ordinary residential road becomes popular sightseeing spot at this time of year.
Almost all the Sakura along the river is Somei-yoshino.





An elementary school
 

- 鷺池 Sagi-ike Pond, Nara Park -

浮見堂 Ukimi-do Pavilion, April 12th


Overlooking Ukimi-do


- 若草山 Mt. Wakakusa -



The view of Nara City and Ikoma mountain range


Don't they look like enchanted gardens enveloped in ethereal blossoms?


The places introduced here is also in the last year's post.

Linked to Mosaic Monday

Friday, April 19, 2024

Sakura season, 2024 (Part 2)

~Sakura from prime blooming to farewell~

- 茶山園地 Chayama-enchi, Nara Park -

Chayama-enchi, a small hilly woods hidden at the foot of 若草山 Mount Wakakusa, 
is abundant of double-flowered 奈良の九重桜 Nara-no-kokonoe-zakura,
which is endemic to Nara.


This is a quiet place.
I love to see Deer eating Sakura petals or resting peacefully on the Sakura carpet.
Sakura petals are spring delicacy of deer.

A Sakura petal in his mouth

While Sakura blossoms usually have 5 sepals, this variety has uniquely as many as 10 sepals.
It's a shame that Nara-no-kokonoe-zakura rarely get noticed in spite of its beauty and rarity.
Probably because their blossoming time falls on the Somei-yoshino's all around.
 



After keeping low position to take photos of deer for a while, it's so refreshing to look up.
 


 - 佐保川 Saho River -

This is the second time I walked along the river during this Sakura season.

Pathway along the river

Is it snowing?
No, constnatly falling petals of Sakura blossoms.

April 13th

 Departing one after another in the breeze; this is the gentle farewell of Sakura.


Petals in the shimmering pink water.


It's still beautiful even though the trees have less blossoms.


Green leaves replace flowers once the petals fall.
Season is changing into the new leaves of soft to bright green hues.


A bird took off to the next stop.



 - 若草山 Mt. Wakakusa -


The grassy 若草山 Mount Wakakusa, 342 meters high, is a nice place 
to enjoy the panoramic views of Nara City and as far as Kyoto and Osaka.
The summit is easily accessible as I wrote in Let's climb Mount Wakakusa!

April 14th



Relaxing deer under Sakura blossoms at  the summit.


Less blossoms on branches, more petals in the air and on the ground.
Sakura season is already over in Nara  and the Sakura front has moved far to the northern Japan.


Academic year starts in April in Japan.
My youngest grandchild M entered Elementary School when Sakura was in full bloom.
Pupils walked to and from the school under the canopy of blossoms along the school road.

Performance of rythmic gymnastics

Why do cherry blossoms bloom at a certain time?  

The science behind Japans cherry blossoms explains the "importance of winter."

  1. After the flowers fall off, the tree makes new buds in summer.
  2. The buds get into sleep in fall.
  3. Chill air of winter wake them up to make themselves swell gradually
  4. When spring comes and it gets warmer, the buds bloom.

Warm weather (above 15 degrees C) of March makes the buds open.  So, I had thought that  the cold weather of this March delayed the blooming about one week later than usual. That's right partly, but there is more significant reason.

Warm weather alone won't make the flowers bloom. They need  enough cold spell of weather  in winter to wake up in the spring.  In January and February of this year, the winter cold was often interrupted by spring-like or even early-summer-like warmth.  If our winter becomes more and more warm due to the climate change, I wonder what would become of Sakura blossoming in the southern part of Japan.


Sunday, April 7, 2024

Sakura season, 2024

Relatively warm winter made people expect the early arrival of Sakura, 
cherry blossoms, but cold March prevented it.
Sakura wouldn't open in the air less than 15 degrees C.
In Nara, their blossoming was about a week later than "recent usual", 
but the same with the "usua in my childhood".

Somei-yoshino, or Yoshino cherry

染井吉野 Somei Yoshino is the most widely planted cultivar across Japan.
The flowers grow in clusters of five or six together.
Their color is pale-pink, light-colored compared to other varieties.
It is spectacular to see the etherela flowers blooming in abundance on each branch
all at once.
It has a distinctive feature to bloom before the leaves emerge.



- 奈良公園 Nara Park -

Only two days later than the official announcement about the first blooming 
of Somei-yoshino, the blossoms were nearing to their best in open sunny places 
due to the highly accelerated warming up.
  
Sakura and Kobushi (Magnolia kobus) at the 鷺池 Sagi-ike Pond


There seemed to be more overseas tourists than Japanese.

春日野園地 Kasugano-enchi Park



- The garden of 甍 Iraka, New Public Hall -



-海龍王寺 Kairyu-oh-ji Temple -



 -佐保川 Saho River -

Another two days later, Sakura were at their best barely before petals drifting in air.






I loved these blossoms at first sight.
Petals are tinted pink slightly and fringed a little deeper pink.
I wonder what variety this Sakura tree is.






Saho River is one of my favorite walking courses, especially in spring and autumn.
It flows southwest through the center of Nara City.
About 1,000 Somei-yoshino trees line the banks.


I always start from 図書情報館 Tosho Johokan, Nara Prefectural Library
 and Information Center.


Exhibition of kinetic art is held till April 21st.
The word "kinetic" means works relating to motion.
In contrast to static sculptures, movement is incorporated into art.
They are imaginative, lively and interesting works of art of which parts 
are moving and making mechanical sound.





As of today, Sakura season is still in halfway.
The report of Sakura is to be continued.
Stay tuned!