Washington DC's National Cherry Blossom Festival: A Trip for Your Bucket List
Cherry blossoms frame the Washington Monument at dawn during the 2023 National Cherry Blossom Festival along the Tidal Basin.
When the cherry trees bloom, spring in Washington, DC, is magical — transforming into a fairy tale setting of historical monuments framed with delicate pink and white blossoms. It is a place where a soft breeze can send petals floating through the air, almost like a springtime version of snow.
The National Cherry Blossom Festival was started in 1935 to commemorate the 1912 gift of 3,020 cherry trees from Japan to Washington, DC, as an international gesture of friendship. The festival now spans four weeks. While the cherry blossoms are the festival's star feature, it includes a parade, street food, entertainment, and many events throughout the month.
The Yoshino cherry trees are the most celebrated cherry trees of the festival, and it is their peak bloom that most visitors wish to experience. Even though there are a dozen cherry tree varieties in Washington, they do not all bloom simultaneously. Still, the blooming season coincides with almost the entire festival. So no matter when you arrive, it's guaranteed you'll see some cherry blossoms. Without traveling to Japan, this is one of few places on Earth where you can experience the Japanese custom of Hanami or watching blossoms. More than 1.5 million visitors travel to our nation's capital annually to celebrate this occasion.
Understanding Hanami
To understand the Japanese custom of Hanami — the tradition of watching blossoms — is to appreciate the magnitude of the gift Washington, DC received more than a century ago. With over 1,200 years of history, Hanami traces back to 812 CE, when Emperor Saga held the first official cherry blossom viewing in Shinsen‑en, the famed garden in Kyoto. What began as an elite court pastime gradually expanded to the samurai class, and eventually to the general public during the Edo Period (1603–1868), becoming one of Japan’s most beloved seasonal celebrations.
In Japanese, the word for cherry blossom is sakura. In ancient times, sakura symbolized relaxation, a concept that once challenged the strict expectations of etiquette in Japanese society. Over the centuries, the meaning evolved. Today, cherry blossoms represent renewal, impermanence, and the quiet beauty of beginnings. In a culture rich with symbolism, it’s fitting that April marks the start of both Japan’s fiscal year and the school year, aligning the nation’s rhythms with the arrival of spring blooms.
They celebrate the season of sakura by gathering beneath the blossoms, sharing food, drink, and conversation. It’s a moment to reconnect with old friends, strengthen family ties, and welcome new acquaintances before the start of the new year.
The life of the sakura is brief, and for the Japanese, it serves as a reminder of how fleeting life can be. Only about two weeks after reaching their peak, the blossoms fall from the trees and daily life resumes its familiar rhythm.
More than a gift of trees, Hanami is a beautiful tradition the Japanese people shared with us — an invitation to pause, reflect, and appreciate beauty while it lasts.
The History Behind the Gift
In 1885, Washington DC socialite and travel writer Eliza Ruhamah Scidmore returned home from Japan, utterly smitten with Japan's flowering cherry trees. She gushed over the experience, writing,
"The blooming cherry tree is the most ideally, wonderfully beautiful tree that nature has to show, and its short-lived glory makes the enjoyment the keener and more poignant."
Credited as the visionary behind Washington's cherry blossoms, Scidmore first proposed planting the trees at the Tidal Basin to the U.S. Army superintendent in charge of the new Tidal Basin park, but she was promptly rejected. At the time, the parkland, recently reclaimed from the Potomac River mud flats, was barren.
Scidmore was tenacious, to say the least. For 24 years, Eliza continued presenting her proposal to every new superintendent, receiving nothing but rejection each time.
She later wrote in a 1910 magazine article about her efforts,
"Amiable Army officers lent a weary ear to the tale of the Japanese cherry blossom and the future fairyland, but none grew excited or was convinced."
In 1908, she met a kindred spirit while attending an Arbor Day presentation by a doctor and U.S. Department of Agriculture official, David Fairchild. Dr. Fairchild had successfully transplanted 100 Japanese cherry trees on his Maryland estate to test the trees' ability to thrive in the environment. Those cherry trees had survived a year, and he deemed his experiment successful.
Like her, Fairchild envisioned a "field of cherries" around the Tidal Basin, so the pair joined forces.
In 1909, Eliza, who had briefly met first lady Helen "Nellie" Herron Taft in Japan, wrote to her outlining her plan to purchase cherry trees for the nation's capital. A response came just two days later. The first lady loved the idea and wrote back that she had taken the matter up and had already been promised the trees.
Nellie had traveled to the Philippines in 1901 with her husband, now President William Howard Taft, who was Governor General of the Philippines at the time. While there, she visited the Lunete river park in Manila. Every evening, Manila's elite would stroll the tree-lined promenades and visit the beautiful gardens and bandshell. Nellie had remembered this iconic location carrying the memory with her all these years. She viewed the tidal flats as a potential site to develop a similar space for the American people.
Celebrated Japanese chemist Jokichi Takamine, who achieved fame by discovering the existence of adrenaline, was in Washington when the First Lady's plans were made public. Knowing that his country was working to strengthen ties with the United States, Takamine immediately notified the Japanese consul in New York. Then, relaying the news, he proposed that Japan gift the United States 2,000 cherry trees as a goodwill gesture between the two nations.
As one of Japan's most cherished treasures, it was a generous offer, and the first lady immediately accepted.
Sadly, when that 1908 shipment of cherry trees arrived at the Seattle port, the Department of Agriculture discovered they were diseased and infested with insects and parasitic worms. President Taft regretfully gave his consent to destroy the saplings. It is said they resembled a giant funeral pyre when heaped up and set ablaze.
In 1912 when the second shipment arrived, the trees were perfect. They came with a personal letter addressed to the First Lady from the Mayoress of Tokyo. Yei Theodora Ozaki wrote that her husband, The Mayor of Tokyo,
“hopes the trees will form an avenue in Washington as a memorial of national friendship between the US and Japan.”
On March 27, 1912, with little fanfare, the First Lady and the Japanese ambassador's wife, Viscountess Chinda, planted the first two cherry trees on the north bank of the Tidal Basin approximately 125 feet south of today's Independence Avenue SW. Eliza Scidmore was one of the few people that were also in attendance.
Unfortunately, no photographs were taken to capture this momentous occasion. It took the rest of the decade for the entire shipment to be planted.
These flowering trees immediately became a beloved Washington DC institution. So much so that when the Tidal Basin was selected as the location for the Jefferson Memorial, the public was outraged. Fearing mass removal or even the loss of a single tree was too much, a group of 150 society ladies dressed in furs descended upon the Jefferson Memorial construction site on November 18. 1938.
Some chained themselves to the cherry trees while others yanked shovels from the worker's hands, using them to replace the dirt dug out from around the trees. Finally, one of the chained protestors cried in distress, "This is the worst desecration of beauty in the capital since the burning of the White House by the British," which happened during the War of 1812.
President Roosevelt, who could hear the protest from the White House, arrived on the scene declaring the trees would be transplanted, not destroyed. He commented that newspaper reporters had enraged the public with false reports of the destruction of the cherry tree. It was "one of the most interesting cases of newspaper flimflam" he had encountered. Then, attempting to cool tempers and make light of the protest, Roosevelt joked that if the women didn't leave the construction site, they, along with the trees, would be gently but firmly transplanted to another section of Potomac Park! FDR would later refer to this incident as the "Cherry Tree Rebellion." The cherry trees were uprooted after dark to avoid any other disturbances.
Understanding Peak Bloom for Trip Planning
Being my first visit, I was worried about hotel reservations filling up. I discovered that everyone waits until the last minute to make their plans hoping to hit peak bloom. The moment peak bloom is called, rooms start booking rapidly, so there's a fine line between holding out as long as possible and waiting too long.
Peak bloom varies every year depending on the weather conditions. On average, peak bloom falls between the last week in March and the first week in April. But that isn't even a safe assumption. The earliest peak bloom on record was March 15, 1990, and the latest was April 18, 1958, so it's imperative to keep a close eye on the forecast.
Around March 1, the National Park Service, Washington Post Capital Weather Gang, and the NBC Storm Team 4 will all post their peak bloom forecasts. At this point, it is a guess. They will most likely all revise their estimated dates before peak bloom is called, but the National Park Service is who calls it, so their page is the most important one to watch.
About two weeks before the earliest estimate, I checked the sites daily. I discovered the peak bloom announcement on the National Mall and Memorial Parks Facebook page long before the NPS updated its website.
If you cannot wait until the last minute to make your reservations, try to hold out until at least 7 to 10 days before the peak bloom estimate. The forecast starts getting reasonably accurate at this point. It will guarantee that even if you don't hit the day of peak bloom, there will still be plenty of flowers for an incredible experience.
Peak bloom is when 70% of the Yoshino Cherry Tree blossoms around the Tidal Basin are open. Everything I have read says the 2 to 3 days after peak bloom is usually the two prettiest days of the season. After that, the blossoms will typically last 4-7 days before they start falling. Still, if the conditions are right, meaning no heavy rains or wind, they can hang around for as long as ten days before transitioning to their final spring phase, developing green leaves.
Just to give you an idea from my images. In 2023, when I visited, peak bloom was called on Thursday, March 23, and I was at the Tidal Basin on the third day after peak.
There are twelve different varieties of cherry trees which all have slightly different blooming seasons. Yoshino and Kwanzan are the two most common varieties in Washington, DC. The Kwanzan cherry trees are primarily located in East Potomac Park and come into bloom about two weeks after the Yoshino. The earliest bloomers are the Japanese Weeping Cherrys which bloom about a week before the Yoshino.
If you happen to be too early for the Yoshino cherry blossoms, head over to the Smithsonian Garden behind the Castle since the saucer magnolias should be in bloom.
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