Century-old cherry trees bust a bloom

Yoshino Cultivar in Washington, D.C.
Yoshino cultivar in Washington, D.C. (Wikimedia Commons)

Steve Hendrix’s story in The Washington Post eloquently describes the original “geezer” cherry trees about to “bust a bloom” in Washington, D.C. You’ll love the photos, too. Below is an excerpt from the article:

In human years, they are 156 years old. And it shows.

You’ll seldom find a more gnarled, knobbed or bent-over bunch of geezer trees than these ancient Yoshino cherries lining a short stretch of the Tidal Basin. It’s an orchard of gnomes and trolls, a grove of exhausted old-timers boasting all the upright rigor of melted candles.

And yet, stand back. The “originals” are about to bust a bloom. For the 100th spring in a row, it’s showtime for the survivors of the first 3,000 Japanese cherry trees planted here a century ago this month.

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A national census for Cherry Trees

How many Cherry Trees are in Portland? (AFP)
How many Cherry Trees are in Portland? (AFP)

How many Cherry Trees reside in your city?

In an effort to study the effects of climate change on flowering Cherry Trees, scientists in London will be conducting a national census for the popular species.

The three-year survey will use data from the general public, reports Yahoo! News.

So, this begs the question, how many Cherry Trees are there in Portland?

Can anyone even make an educated guess?

Friends of Trees sells three different species of cherry, all semi-dwarf.

–Toshio Suzuki

Arbor Week events from Portland Parks & Rec

(Portland Parks & Recreation)
(Portland Parks & Recreation)

Monday, April 5, 7-9 a.m. and 11 a.m.-1 p.m.

Tea Under the Cherry Trees with members of the Tree Steward Coalition, Waterfront Park, NW Everett & Naito Parkway

Tuesday, April 6, 1-3 p.m.

Arbor Day Celebration with Commissioner Nick Fish, West Powellhurst Park & Elementary School, SE 115 & Division

  • Fun, food & tree activities
  • Community & student tree planting
  • PP&R arborists
  • Community tree resources
  • Free native trees
  • Tree climbing & youth activities
  • Neighborhood tree resources

Wednesday, April 7, 10-11:30 a.m.

Laurelhurst Park Tree Walk with “Trees of Greater Portland” author, Phyllis Reynolds, 3600 SE Ankeny

Thursday, April 8, 11 a.m.-1 p.m.

Trees of Chapman Square from an urban forestry bucket truck, SW 4th & Main

Friday, April 9, 10-11:30 a.m.

Mature Tree Care Class, Midland Park, 805 SE 122 Ave

Saturday, April 10, 9 a.m.-noon

Portland’s Trees by Bike, Sellwood Park, 7600 SE 7th Ave

For more information call 503-823-1650 or visit the city’s Arbor Week Web site.

–Toshio Suzuki

What’s Flowering Now? March 29

Japan is in full bloom, according to 150 million sources. (nytimes.com)
Japan is in "full bloom," according to 150 million sources. (nytimes.com)
(washingtonpost.com)
(washingtonpost.com)

The Japanese Meteorological Agency announced last week that the cherry blossoms in Tokyo were in bloom, officially kicking off the viewing season.

For a society that has a phrase in its language (sakura zensen) describing the specific front of warmth that blooms cherry blossoms, this is no small announcement.

An excerpt from In Transit, a blog from The New York Times:

Japan designates specific cherry trees across the country for monitoring and considers a region to be in bloom when at least five or six flowers can be counted on each of that region’s trees. When 80 percent of the trees’ flowers have opened, typically a few days later, an area is officially designated as in ‘‘full bloom.’’

While Japan and Portland have already had their fill of cherry blossoms, the moment of fleeting beauty is still set to arrive in America’s capital.

With a time-line of April 1-4, the schedule of events is extensive for Washington D.C. and its famous Cherry Blossom Festival.

Here is an excerpt from an anecdotal Washington Post story about how one U.S. president felt about the cherry blossoms:

Franklin D. Roosevelt was mad.

This whole problem with the cherry blossoms was nothing but a “flimflam” cooked up by the newspapers to boost advertising, the president told the White House reporters.

“Six hundred trees” doomed, he mocked, reading from some headlines. “Public aroused,” he quoted, “Ten Million-Dollar Project.” It was baloney. As for those women chained to the trees down by the Tidal Basin . . . they would be carted off along with their trees.

Harsh words from FDR. But this was the great “Cherry Tree Rebellion,” as one newspaper called it — one of the strangest and most passionate chapters in the now-almost 100-year history of the cherry blossoms in Washington.

Here are links to previous editions of the Friends of Trees, ‘What’s Flowering Now?’ series: March 8; March 13; and March 22.

Submit your own photos of flowering trees to [email protected].

–Toshio Suzuki

Tree Tips for March and April

What's Flowering Now? March 5
These trees next to the Friends of Trees downspout basin are drawing a lot of attention right now. (FOT file)

These tree tips, specific for the months of March and April, come courtesy of Collier Arbor Care, a Friends of Trees sponsor:

  • Evaluate trees and prune, removing dead wood and maintaining structure
  • Treat early blooming flowering and fruit trees, like peaches, plums, and cherries for disease problems
  • Treat for leaf blight diseases on dogwood, sycamore and flowering trees
  • Treat diseases on fruit trees like apple scab, brown rot and blossom blight on cherry trees
  • Check trees for leaf-feeding caterpillars and treat if needed