"__," said to be the world's first novel, was written during Japan's Heian period. | |
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| Numbers Don't Lie |
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| Number of individually named cherry trees in Amsterdamse Bos, a park in Amsterdam | 400 |
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| | Rough average life span of a cherry blossom tree | 35 |
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| Estimated number of sakura varieties in Japan | 200 |
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| | Percentage of cherry blossom buds that must be open for trees to be considered in peak bloom | 70 |
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| Japan's first gift of cherry trees to the U.S. almost ended in a diplomatic crisis. |
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In 1908, U.S. agriculture official David Fairchild convinced First Lady Helen Taft to introduce cherry blossoms to Washington, D.C., in an effort to beautify the capital. Eager to present a gift to the U.S. as thanks for support during the Russo-Japanese War (1904 to 1905), Japan's government sent 2,000 cherry trees as a gift to the country. Sadly, an inspection team of U.S. Department of Agriculture entomologists determined that the trees were infested with insects and demanded that the trees be burned. With images of burning sakura plastered on the front page of The New York Times, some braced for diplomatic outrage in Tokyo. Instead, that city's mayor joked: "To be honest about it, it has been an American tradition to destroy cherry trees ever since your first President, George Washington." Japanese officials apologized for the faulty gift and sent a new batch of trees, which were successfully installed in the capital. | |
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You might also like | The Amazing Stories Behind 5 Famous Trees | One thing we can take away from some of the world's most famous trees is their resilience, surviving in the most rugged conditions and standing witness to humanity's most difficult moments. | |
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