<p>Japan's famed cherry blossom season blankets the country in the delicate white flowers of the prized and popular "somei-yoshino" tree, delighting residents and visitors alike. But some want change.</p>.<p>The season produces a nationwide frenzy, as forecasters compete to declare when full bloom will arrive, and Japanese unfurl picnic blankets for sometimes raucous flower-viewing parties -- at least in pre-pandemic times.</p>.<p>The blooms of the ubiquitous somei-yoshino strain, which accounts for more than 90 per cent of the cherry trees planted in Japan, last only around a week and tend to emerge simultaneously in a given region because the trees are clones of a single specimen.</p>.<p>And while the tree has become synonymous with blossom season, it is a growing headache for city planners because the strain is prone to disease and tends to grow too large to be well managed in urban settings.</p>.<p>"It's all about planting the right flora in the right place," says Hideaki Tanaka, an expert on sakura -- Japanese for cherry blossoms -- who is trying to popularise other strains.</p>.<p>"There are all kinds of sakura, not just somei-yoshino. I want to help recreate the old times when people enjoyed a wide variety," added Tanaka, 63.</p>.<p>He runs a farm in Yuki, in eastern Japan's Ibaraki prefecture, with around 1,000 sample trees of 400 cherry varieties.</p>.<p>His goal is to convince local officials across Japan to consider alternatives with petals in all shades of pink, or even rare green.</p>.<p>As Tanaka sits on the grass among his trees, nail-sized petals of pale pink flutter down in the gentle breeze, while elsewhere other flowers are still coming into bloom.</p>.<p>It's a scene more like the cherry blossom seasons Japanese enjoyed several centuries ago, with a range of blooms arriving at different times.</p>.<p>His farm is operated by the Flower Association of Japan, which gives cherry saplings to communities that want to create scenic spots to draw tourists and please residents.</p>.<p>The farm has distributed about three million saplings, including somei-yoshino, but it is now promoting the "jindai-akebono" variety which is more resistant to infection and grows smaller, making it easier to prune.</p>.<p>Its flowers bloom around four days earlier than somei-yoshino's and are a stronger pink colour.</p>.<p>But convincing Japan to turn its back on the somei-yoshino strain may not be easy.</p>.<p>As urban development swept the country from the 1950s to 1980s, cities competed to plant countless millions of fast-growing somei-yoshino trees.</p>.<p>Decades on, many of those trees have not been properly pruned, leaving them vulnerable to an infection called "witch's broom" that deforms twigs, discourages flowering and can kill the trees.</p>.<p>Somei-yoshino also grows large -- as high as five-storey buildings in some cases -- with sprawling branches stretching from enormous trunks that can develop hollows, and bulky roots that can crack pavements.</p>.<p>Older trees are at risk during the country's typhoon season, giving city planners plenty of reasons to consider replacing them.</p>.<p>But residents are less convinced.</p>.<p>In western Tokyo's Kunitachi, it has taken officials three decades to remove around 80 of the approximately 210 trees that have been designated as needing to be felled or replaced.</p>.<p>The trees formed an elegant floral tunnel every spring and residents wanted to keep them, said Ryusuke Endo, an official at the city's roads and traffic division.</p>.<p>"Some people moved here to enjoy them and bought apartments along the street," he said, describing locals as emotionally attached to the trees.</p>.<p>Elsewhere, efforts in Yokohama to axe around 300 cherry trees along a busy street caused public outcry and made television news.</p>.<p>In Kunitachi, officials have started planting the jindai-akebono variety promoted by Tanaka's farm, and residents are starting to embrace the new arrivals.</p>.<p>"I believe green shoots of feeling are emerging among residents who are starting to see that they too are very beautiful," Endo said.</p>.<p>But Tanaka said even diversity evangelists like him are convinced the somei-yoshino will never be dethroned as Japan's sakura king.</p>.<p>Instead, he hopes to encourage people to "learn about the profound diversity of cherry trees".</p>.<p>"The somei-yoshino will always be the main draw for cherry viewing. I want to help communities create other places where people can enjoy all kinds of cherry varieties."</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos:</strong></p>
<p>Japan's famed cherry blossom season blankets the country in the delicate white flowers of the prized and popular "somei-yoshino" tree, delighting residents and visitors alike. But some want change.</p>.<p>The season produces a nationwide frenzy, as forecasters compete to declare when full bloom will arrive, and Japanese unfurl picnic blankets for sometimes raucous flower-viewing parties -- at least in pre-pandemic times.</p>.<p>The blooms of the ubiquitous somei-yoshino strain, which accounts for more than 90 per cent of the cherry trees planted in Japan, last only around a week and tend to emerge simultaneously in a given region because the trees are clones of a single specimen.</p>.<p>And while the tree has become synonymous with blossom season, it is a growing headache for city planners because the strain is prone to disease and tends to grow too large to be well managed in urban settings.</p>.<p>"It's all about planting the right flora in the right place," says Hideaki Tanaka, an expert on sakura -- Japanese for cherry blossoms -- who is trying to popularise other strains.</p>.<p>"There are all kinds of sakura, not just somei-yoshino. I want to help recreate the old times when people enjoyed a wide variety," added Tanaka, 63.</p>.<p>He runs a farm in Yuki, in eastern Japan's Ibaraki prefecture, with around 1,000 sample trees of 400 cherry varieties.</p>.<p>His goal is to convince local officials across Japan to consider alternatives with petals in all shades of pink, or even rare green.</p>.<p>As Tanaka sits on the grass among his trees, nail-sized petals of pale pink flutter down in the gentle breeze, while elsewhere other flowers are still coming into bloom.</p>.<p>It's a scene more like the cherry blossom seasons Japanese enjoyed several centuries ago, with a range of blooms arriving at different times.</p>.<p>His farm is operated by the Flower Association of Japan, which gives cherry saplings to communities that want to create scenic spots to draw tourists and please residents.</p>.<p>The farm has distributed about three million saplings, including somei-yoshino, but it is now promoting the "jindai-akebono" variety which is more resistant to infection and grows smaller, making it easier to prune.</p>.<p>Its flowers bloom around four days earlier than somei-yoshino's and are a stronger pink colour.</p>.<p>But convincing Japan to turn its back on the somei-yoshino strain may not be easy.</p>.<p>As urban development swept the country from the 1950s to 1980s, cities competed to plant countless millions of fast-growing somei-yoshino trees.</p>.<p>Decades on, many of those trees have not been properly pruned, leaving them vulnerable to an infection called "witch's broom" that deforms twigs, discourages flowering and can kill the trees.</p>.<p>Somei-yoshino also grows large -- as high as five-storey buildings in some cases -- with sprawling branches stretching from enormous trunks that can develop hollows, and bulky roots that can crack pavements.</p>.<p>Older trees are at risk during the country's typhoon season, giving city planners plenty of reasons to consider replacing them.</p>.<p>But residents are less convinced.</p>.<p>In western Tokyo's Kunitachi, it has taken officials three decades to remove around 80 of the approximately 210 trees that have been designated as needing to be felled or replaced.</p>.<p>The trees formed an elegant floral tunnel every spring and residents wanted to keep them, said Ryusuke Endo, an official at the city's roads and traffic division.</p>.<p>"Some people moved here to enjoy them and bought apartments along the street," he said, describing locals as emotionally attached to the trees.</p>.<p>Elsewhere, efforts in Yokohama to axe around 300 cherry trees along a busy street caused public outcry and made television news.</p>.<p>In Kunitachi, officials have started planting the jindai-akebono variety promoted by Tanaka's farm, and residents are starting to embrace the new arrivals.</p>.<p>"I believe green shoots of feeling are emerging among residents who are starting to see that they too are very beautiful," Endo said.</p>.<p>But Tanaka said even diversity evangelists like him are convinced the somei-yoshino will never be dethroned as Japan's sakura king.</p>.<p>Instead, he hopes to encourage people to "learn about the profound diversity of cherry trees".</p>.<p>"The somei-yoshino will always be the main draw for cherry viewing. I want to help communities create other places where people can enjoy all kinds of cherry varieties."</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos:</strong></p>