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Kyoto: Petals Starting To Fall

ByMatt Evans
Looking up at cherry blossom trees along the Keage Slope

Followingyesterday's report where I checked in on the blossoms at two beautiful survivingcastles in theKansai Region, today I returned once again toKyoto for a late season look at four of its topviewing spots.

With just one day remaining until ourpredicted close to the city's overall best viewing, I wasn't surprised to see petals beginning to fall fromSomei Yoshino trees - the most common species ofcherry blossom - at all four sites. AtNinnaji Temple andHeian Shrine however, a significant number oflater blooming varieties were enough to give quite a different impression overall.

Arashiyama

Petals Starting To Fall
·

First on today's list wasArashiyama, a popular tourist spot in the northwest of the city. Here, the trees lining the streets and clustered along the south bank close to the Togetsukyo Bridge were still looking very full and beautiful, however petals were beginning to fall in a fairly steady stream with even a light breeze, indicating that only a day or two remain to see them at something close to ideal conditions.

Along the main street
Blossoms decorating local shops
A row of cherry blossom trees along the southern bank
More trees in the same area
Trees looking a bit more sparse further along the riverbank
The same trees seen from the island
A closer look at a typical branch

Ninnaji Temple

Full Bloom
·

For my next stop, I made my way a little to the east toNinnaji, one of the city's great temples and a registered World Heritage Site, known for a locally cultivated variety of late blooming cherry blossom tree calledOmuro, itself named for the sub sect ofShingon Buddhism of which Ninnaji is the headtemple.

Inside, the temple grounds are divided into two separate paid areas for the duration of the cherry blossom season: the former residence of the head priest in its own enclosed garden, and a grove of the Omuro blossoms to the north of the entrance.

While theSomei Yoshino blossoms were already looking just a little more sparse than those at Arashiyama, the Omuro trees were only just beginning to open and will considerably lengthen the season here.

The temple's Omuro Flower Festival will continue until May 6, during which there is a special entrance fee of 500 yen for the Omuro grove, and food and craft stalls can be found on the east side of the grounds.

The gate leading to the Omuro grove
A row of cherry blossom trees framing a temple building
A Somei Yoshino tree inside the temple grounds
A view of the Omuro grove
With full bloom, canopies of blossoms will form between the rows
A more developed patch gives a small preview of what to expect
Somei Yoshino trees in bloom (left), and Omuro trees (right)

Heian Shrine

Full Bloom
·

Over in the northeastern part of the city, my next visit was toHeian Shrine, a grand lookingshrine built to resemble the Imperial Palace as it was in theHeian Period (794-1185). Here again the Somei Yoshino trees were attractive while just starting to thin out, however the real star of the show is theYaebenishidare variety - a kind of weeping cherry blossom with pink colored petals, that typically blooms a few days later. Dotted throughout the shrine'sgarden, these were still in full bloom, looking vibrant and full.

Yaebenishidare trees just inside the garden
A shrine building peeking above a row of blossoming trees
A few splashes of pink
A typical branch close to the lake
More blossoms along the path
More Yaebenishidare trees beside another shrine building
A Somei Yoshino tree in the shrine grounds

The Keage Incline

Petals Starting To Fall
·

My final stop of the day was at theKeage Incline, where the twin rows of Somei Yoshino trees lining the preserved section of railtrack were looking a touch more advanced than those at Arashiyama. Still looking very attractive, the scene was further enhanced by storms of petals billowing this way and that with occasional gusts of wind, a spectacle known in Japanese as hanafubuki.

Here, I would expect the blossoms to match ourprediction for Kyoto as a whole and reach the end of best viewing by tomorrow evening.

Looking up along the slope from the bridge
Trees already looking quite sparse from along the road
A look across the slope
Still looking nice, but starting to thin out
Towards the upper part of the slope
Little blizzards of petals could be seen along the slope
A typical branch
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