Crowds gathered Friday to enjoy Japan’s famed cherry blossoms in Tokyo, where cold weather has delayed their bloom.
Cherry blossoms, known as “sakura” in Japanese, are the nation’s favorite flower. People often have sakura viewing parties beneath the falling petals, where there are also picnics and sake drinking.
Vidyuth Lakshman, 36, a tourist from Canada, said she’d seen cherry blossoms in her homeland but “not on this scale. The scale here is crazy.”
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The trees usually are at peak bloom in late March to early April, at the same time the country begins a new school and business year.
Visitors look at the seasonal cherry blossoms on April 5, 2024, at Ueno Park in Tokyo. Crowds have been flocking to revel in Japan’s renowned cherry blossoms despite their delayed bloom caused by chilly weather. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)
“They’re really breathtaking,” said Silver Shea, 47, a tourist from the United States, who was visiting Japan for a month with her 11-year-old daughter. “We leave in about a week, and we were getting nervous that we weren’t going to get to see them blooming.”
Others were also worried about missing the blooms.
“Every day we kept waiting for the cherry blossoms,” said Satya Kandula, 30, another tourist from Canada. “We are leaving tomorrow so we’re so happy that on the last day we got to see the full bloom.”