🌸KYŌTO'S LAST CHERRY BLOSSOMS🌸

drowsy spring
begins with
Omuro’s flowers
ねぶたさの春は御室の花よりぞ
-Yosa Buson (与謝蕪村 1716-84).

Ninna-ji's (仁和寺) grove of cherry trees are some of the last to bloom in the city, bringing sakura season to a dramatic close.
#Japan

flowers in full bloom
the paths of Omuro
bustling with people
花盛り御室の路の人通り
-Dōkei (桐渓).

This poem seems rather apt. Just a few years ago the grounds would have been a checkerboard of picnic blankets, with drunken revelers napping on benches and children playing.
#桜

Reaching their peak (typically) around mid-April, the temple's groves of cherry trees are the last to bloom within the city.

Known as 'Omuro-zakura' (御室桜), Ninna-ji's trees are uniquely stunted, growing to only around 2m tall. They are a variant of 'sato-zakura' (郷さくら).

It is thought that Omuro-zakura (御室桜) originated in Heian times.
The current cherry trees were planted in the early Edo period (江戸時代), shortly after Tokugawa Iemitsu (徳川家光 1604-51) helped rebuild the temple.

#仁和寺 #Ninnaji #御室桜 #omurozakura #sakura #Kyoto #京都

Between 1661-73 cherry blossom viewing at Ninna-ji became popular with the nobility. Emperor Go-Mizunoo (後水尾天皇) visited on many occasions.
Originally only those of noble blood were permitted through the gates to enjoy the groves of Otafuku-zakura (お多福桜).
#cherryblossoms

By 1735 the hanami parties had become so raucous (inappropriate for a temple) that the grounds were closed.

The ban caused such a stir that by 1757 the abbot had a change of heart. He ordered the construction of tea pavilions and opened the groves to one and all for a month🙌

There is an Edo folk song that goes-
"I love plain women,
even though,
like the Omuro cherry trees,
their blossoms are low"
わたしやお多福 御室の桜 はなが低うても人が好く.

It is an allusion to the unusually stunted Omuro trees, also known as Otafuku-zakura (お多福桜).
#京都

Otafuku (お多福) is a well-loved but plain woman with a characteristically small nose.
'Flower' (花) and 'nose' (鼻) are both pronounced 'hana' (はな) in Japanese. The phrase 'hana ga fukui' can thus be read as a pun, meaning both 'low blossom' and 'small nose'.
#cherryblossom

For centuries it was unclear why Omuro's trees were so stunted, but recent soil analysis revealed the answer.
Clay-like soil covers Omuro. Not only is the soil hard, preventing the trees from spreading roots, but it is also low in nutrients.

#Japan #Kyoto #お多福桜 #御室桜 #御室

Kameya Yoshinaga's (亀屋良長) 'sakurabana' (さくらばな) captures the moment cherry blossoms scatter to reveal the tree's fresh green leaves🌿✨

my cherry blossoms
even flush with fresh leaves
scatter
我桜わか葉盛りもちりにけり
-Kobayashi Issa, 1816.
Trans. David G. Lanoue.
#Kyoto #京都
You may be overwhelmed by all the whites and pinks, but it always pays to look more closely as there are lots of other colours on show right now.
Ninna-ji has a few varities of 'green' cherry blossoms. The temple is also famed for its purplish mitsuba-tsutsuji (三葉躑躅).
#Kyoto

Ninna-ji's 36.18m tall pagoda soars above the precincts, making it a backdrop no matter where you are in the grounds.
It was completed with large-scale renovations to the temple in 1624.

#Ninnaji #仁和寺 #Kyoto #京都 #Japan #pagoda #cherryblossoms #sakura #桜

@camelliakyoto the same abbot closed the gardens then reopened them 22 years later?