Cherry blossom season in Tokyo
IT'S officially cherry blossom season again in Tokyo.
The Japanese Meteorological Agency yesterday said the country's capital was officially in bloom, a closely watched announcement that marks the start of the yearly cherry blossom viewing season.
The annual rite of spring in Japan goes back hundreds of years and involves sitting under "sakura" trees and taking in the fluffy pink flowers, which drop off about a week after they appear. In Tokyo, residents flock to parks to lay down tarpaulins and claim the best spots, then host big picnics and long drinking sessions.
In Tokyo's Yoyogi Park, a small group of flower viewers gathered underneath cherry trees laden with pink buds.
"It's time for a flower viewing party. This is a great time for me to meet my friends," 20-year-old university student Ryosuke Fujiki said as he drank with friends at the park.
Japan designates certain sakura trees for monitoring all across the country, and considers a region to be in bloom when at least five or six flowers can be counted on its trees.
When 80 percent of the trees' flowers have opened, typically a few days later, an area is officially designated as in "full bloom," prime time for blossom gazing and revelry.
This season starts a day later than last year in Tokyo, but six days before the historical average. The first flowers have bloomed earlier in recent years, triggering concerns of global warming. In the southern, warmer Okinawa islands, cherry blossoms began blooming in late December.
The Japanese Meteorological Agency yesterday said the country's capital was officially in bloom, a closely watched announcement that marks the start of the yearly cherry blossom viewing season.
The annual rite of spring in Japan goes back hundreds of years and involves sitting under "sakura" trees and taking in the fluffy pink flowers, which drop off about a week after they appear. In Tokyo, residents flock to parks to lay down tarpaulins and claim the best spots, then host big picnics and long drinking sessions.
In Tokyo's Yoyogi Park, a small group of flower viewers gathered underneath cherry trees laden with pink buds.
"It's time for a flower viewing party. This is a great time for me to meet my friends," 20-year-old university student Ryosuke Fujiki said as he drank with friends at the park.
Japan designates certain sakura trees for monitoring all across the country, and considers a region to be in bloom when at least five or six flowers can be counted on its trees.
When 80 percent of the trees' flowers have opened, typically a few days later, an area is officially designated as in "full bloom," prime time for blossom gazing and revelry.
This season starts a day later than last year in Tokyo, but six days before the historical average. The first flowers have bloomed earlier in recent years, triggering concerns of global warming. In the southern, warmer Okinawa islands, cherry blossoms began blooming in late December.
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