Ottawa Citizen

Owner asks thieves to water 400-year-old bonsai

- CLEVE R. WOOTSON JR.

Fuyumi Iimura has a message for whoever broke into her family’s expansive garden outside Tokyo and made off with a small fortune’s worth of some of the planet’s most beautiful bonsai trees: Please water them.

Over a period of several nights, a team of bonsai bandits stole the cream of Iimura’s collection, regarded as some of the most exquisite in existence, CNN reported.

It was like losing a child, Iimura said in a Facebook post. The only thing worse would be if the trees weren’t properly cared for and centuries’ worth of work withered away because of neglect.

“I want whoever took the bonsai to make sure they are watered. The shimpaku lived for 400 years. It needs care and can’t survive a week without water,” Iimura said in the grief-stricken post on her Facebook page, referring to rare junipers that were stolen. “They can live forever — even after we’re gone — if they receive the proper care.”

Clearly, the thieves knew what they were doing during last month’s heist. They stole a total of seven trees, but those were the most expensive in Iimura’s collection, according to CNN. Combined, the plants were worth US$118,000, but could fetch much more on illicit markets.

“We treated these miniature trees like our children,” Iimura said. “There are no words to describe how we feel. It’s like having your limbs lopped off.”

Iimura’s husband Seiji is a fifth-generation bonsai master whose family has been cultivatin­g bonsai since the Edo period, which ended in 1868.

But if the bonsai were children, the shimpaku was clearly the favourite, a 400-year-old cover model of a tree whose undulating lines are straight out of a storybook.

Shimpaku junipers, which are increasing­ly endangered in the wild, are found in difficult-to-access cliff areas, according to the World Bonsai Friendship Federation. Stories that sound like mythical fables abound of bonsai collectors risking their lives on Japanese mountainsi­des to collect the trees.

The Iimuras’ shimpaku had a similar backstory.

It had been taken from a mountain more than four centuries ago and their family had gradually culled the tree down to its current size, three feet tall and more than two feet wide.

It dotted posters for a bonsai fair. Fuyumi snapped photos of the tree topped with snow, its needles covered in sparkling ice crystals. They had hoped to enter it into a contest in coming months.

Despite its celebrity status, the Iimuras didn’t hide their prized bonsai, according to the Asahi Shimbun, a national newspaper in Japan. They kept the farm open to the public, so fans could be close to the bonsai. For the same reason, the couple did not implement restrictiv­e security measures. That will change after thieves made off with a miniature tree that costs as much as a sports car.

They also made off with other trees, also rare shimpaku.

“An individual well versed in bonsai must have been involved in the theft,” Seiji told the Asahi Shimbun.

Washington Post

 ?? CALLA KESSLER/WASHINGTON POST ?? Bonsai can live for a long time, including this 400-year-old tree at the National Bonsai and Penjing Museum.
CALLA KESSLER/WASHINGTON POST Bonsai can live for a long time, including this 400-year-old tree at the National Bonsai and Penjing Museum.

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