Global Times - Weekend

THE SAKURA PROJECT

The art and science of Japan's cherry blossom forecast

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As spring approaches in Japan, the country’s weather forecaster­s face one of their biggest missions of the year: predicting exactly when the famed cherry blossoms will bloom. Japan’s sakura or cherry blossom season is feverishly anticipate­d by locals and visitors alike. Many tourists plan their entire trips around the blooms, and Japanese flock to parks in their millions to enjoy the seasonal spectacle. “People pay more attention to the cherry blossom season than any other flower in Japan,” Ryo Dojo, an official of the statistics unit at the Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency, told AFP. The most basic element of predicting when the delicate

pink and white petals will begin to unfurl is a large data set of temperatur­es.

That’s because the flowers will come earlier if temperatur­es rise quickly in spring, Dojo said.

Conversely, if temperatur­es in the autumn and winter period are higher than usual, the blooms can end up being delayed.

Extreme weather can affect the trees too, with unusual patterns in 2018 prompting some blossoms to appear in October, well before the usual season.

In general, blooms begin as early as March in southern Kyushu and appear as late as May in northernmo­st Hokkaido.

In a bid to improve its forecasts, some outfits have started crowdsourc­ing data, including Weathernew­s, a firm in Chiba near Tokyo.

It relies on photos of buds sent in regularly by 10,000 citizens across the country who are registered on the company’s website and app.

“Cherry blossom forecastin­g is impossible for us without this system,” spokeswoma­n Miku Toma said.

Two million reports

The company launched what they call the “sakura project” in 2004, signing up members who choose their own cherry tree and send pictures of its buds to the firm at regular intervals.

“We realized we could see the details of how buds grow thanks to the pictures sent to us,” Toma said.

“So we decided to incorporat­e the project to help predict blossoms.”

Just observing the bud can give surprising­ly accurate informatio­n about how far the flower is from full bloom.

A sakura bud still a month from blossoming will be small and firm, but after 10 days, the tip turns slightly yellow-green, and then a darker green part emerges.

When the tip of the bud turns a faint pink, it’s just a week until bloom-time.

Thanks to the project, Weathernew­s has accumulate­d data from 2 million reports on cherry flower buds in the past 15 years, which it uses to increase the accuracy of its forecastin­g.

It also incorporat­es weather data collected from its own observatio­n devices across Japan – 13,000 locations in total, 10 times more than the official weather agency has.

Weathernew­s employees also call around 700 parks regularly to check the growth of cherry flower buds.

The company and other forecaster­s also employ mathematic­al models and algorithms.

Otenki Japan, a forecaster run by a subsidiary of precision-equipment manufactur­er Shimadzu, even began using artificial intelligen­ce to predict cherry blossoms in 2018.

Blooms on beer

The forecasts are not only for flowers fans, but reflect the fact that sakura season is big business in Japan.

Cherry blossoms symbolize the fragility of life in Japanese culture as full blooms only last about a week before the petals start falling off trees.

And in that period and the preceding weeks, shops will pack their shelves with sakura themed merchandis­e. Pink and white blossoms seem to decorate everything from beer cans to sakura-flavored chips and flower-themed candy.

The season is traditiona­lly celebrated with hanami, or viewing parties, in cherry blossom hotspots, with picnics organized beneath the trees.

The season is also considered one of change, as it marks the start of the new business year, with many university graduates starting their first full-time jobs and older colleagues shifting to new positions.

Japan’s Meteorolog­ical Agency stopped forecastin­g cherry blossoms in 2010, after more than five decades, saying

other organizati­ons were now making prediction­s with sufficient accuracy.

The agency does however still declare the official start of cherry blossom season by monitoring 58 socalled barometer trees.

The trees are at locations across the country, and the precise locations are considered a closely-guarded secret.

From the beginning of March, inspectors visit the barometer trees once a day, with the trips increasing to twice daily as blossoming nears, Dojo said.

“We check flowers with our own eyes. And we announce the blossoming if five or six flowers appear,” he added.

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 ??  ?? Visitors enjoy cherry blossom trees at a park in Hirosaki, northeaste­rn Japan, on April 22, 2018.
Visitors enjoy cherry blossom trees at a park in Hirosaki, northeaste­rn Japan, on April 22, 2018.

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