Jefferson Memorial just after dawn |
This is my first time to really experience the Cherry Blossom Festival which happens annually here in Washington DC. This year the festival took on a more poignant note with the earthquake disaster in Japan still looming on the headlines. The cherry blossom is the national flower of Japan, and 99 years ago the Japanese government gifted a couple thousand cherry trees as a show of friendship to the American government. Interestingly, the original shipment had to be destroyed after being inspected by the department of agriculture who deemed it to be bug infested. However, the Japanese government was determined, and the following year a new crop was sent with all the precautions taken to ensure a clean bill of health upon arrival.
The trees were planted along the Potomac and the Tidal Basin, with the first two trees being set in the ground by Mrs. Taft herself. (Those trees are still alive and thriving, by the way.)
The Cherry Blossom festival attracts millions of visitors every year, and, for 10 days, the city is full of tourist...each of them with a camera trying to capture the essence of this magnificent display of Spring's magic.
An artist on the tidal basin |
Along the Mt. Vernon bike trail |