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hanami

Hanami – hanafubuki spells the end for 2009

I learned this week that there is a special word for the flurry of petals raining down in the breeze – 花吹雪 (hanafubuki) – which is a beautiful sight of tiny pink flakes floating down from above.  My Japanese friends especially love hanafubuki, but part of me felt that this is like celebrating the demise of the very thing that they have come to see.  Maybe this is a more realistic acceptance that sakura season has to end, whilst I’m the unrealistic one who can’t accept that the party’s nearly over.  Either way, I’m feeling a bit glum that the sakura petals have all fluttered off the trees, and the clouds of pink on the branches that the nation has been revelling in for the last week or so have all given way for the new green leaves.

This post contains some photos reflecting on a week in which Tokyo went crazy for cherry bossoms – and is now waiting until for it to happen briefly again next year.

Meguro River at Nakameguro (yozakura – night time hanami):

Meguro River at Nakameguro

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Lunchtime hanami

Plastic sheet out in Hibiya Park, shoes off, eating bento with colleagues, sakura petals raining down on us.

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Hanami at Nagasaki Peace Park

Does this look like the centre of atomic destruction?  It was hard to imagine that these sakura, just coming out, are in the park that marks the hypocentre of the Nagasaki atomic bomb explosion.  Nagasaki has recovered and is now a very scenic, cosmopolitan, thriving city.

This is the third in a series of Nagasaki posts, from my weekend visit to Nagasaki a few weeks ago - the others are here and here.

Sakura in Peace Park

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More Meguro River hanami

I’m walking home from my language class so that I can walk along the Meguro River, and all the way under the sakura canopy – around 2 or 3 kilometres.

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Hanami fever hits Tokyo

This is what *EVERYONE* in Tokyo (or so it seems) has been doing today and yesterday – enjoying “hanami” (viewing the cherry blossoms).  This is Kinuta Park in Setagaya-ku (around 4 or 5 stations west of Shibuya on the Den-en Toshi Line) mid-Saturday afternoon.  This weekend is the sakura peak in Tokyo, so there’s no time like the present! 

Instructions: Invite your friends, find a free spot (as close to a cherry tree as possible), lay down your blue plastic sheet, take off your shoes, eat your  lunch, let the kids run around, and drink beer/sake, while all the time enjoying the sakura before they’re gone.
Kinuta Park, Setagaya-ku

Kinuta Park, Setagaya-ku

Sakura-ga-oka Sakura Namiki

Here are some photos taken tonight from my mobile phone camera of the hill leading up from Shibuya Station to the Sakura-ga-oka district – appropriately named at this time of year, with the row of cherry blossoms.  Bring on the weekend and hanami!

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Himuro Jinja

The weeping cherry tree at Himuro Shrine, Nara, is “mankai” – fully open today. It’s hard to take a photo without taking all the other photographers!

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