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Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival

Cherry Blossoms in Vancouver – See them, bike them, EAT them!

Guest post provided by: Joyce Chua – Vancouver Foodie Tours

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Cherry Blossom season in Vancouver is a beautiful one. It signifies the beginning of Spring and adds a blush of pink to the city. Like in Hokkaido, Paris, and San Francisco, cherry blossoms have become a tourist attraction in Vancouver. What the public may not know is that the Cherry Blossom Festival is actually organized by a non-profit organization. As many of Vancouver’s 40,000 cherry trees originated as gifts from Japan, The Festival was created to express gratitude for the offering and celebrate the beauty and joy that cherry blossoms bring to the city. This following excerpt is from vcbf.ca:

The underlying purpose of the Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival is a simple one embracing all citizens of all ages: we are blessed to have these trees and the more closely we look at them and the more we learn about them, the more enjoyment they give us. And, likewise, the more we are motivated to care for and nurture them. Vancouverites, who already enjoy an active outdoor lifestyle, now, through the efforts of the Festival have even more choices.

This brings a new level of meaning to the festival; we not simply enjoying nature, but we are actively fostering, growing, and supporting an integral piece of Vancouver’s history. Over the years, The Cherry Blossom Festival has become an opportunity for expression and appreciation through music, poetry, photography, art, design, craft and cuisine.

As culinary ambassadors for Vancouver’s multicultural food scene, Vancouver Foodie Tours is thrilled provide this guest post on Sakura Night and Vancouver’s 9th Annual Cherry Blossom Festival. With both our Guilty Pleasures Gourmet Tour and the World’s Best Food Truck Tour, we aim to highlight the impressive cultural diversity of our chefs, their food, and their restaurants. Our Vancouver food blog covers all types of cuisine, making special note of places to visit in Vancouver that hold cultural & historical significance.

 This year’s highly-anticipated culinary showcase, Sakura Night, is looking more extravagant than ever before.

The standing dinner reception is held in Tojo’s Restaurant on W Broadway. As a quick foodie point-of-referral, Chef Tojo is accredited with creating the California Roll and the Dynamite Roll – staples in literally every sushi joint. But Tojo’s repertoire is anything but everyday; known for his impeccable technique, quality and innovation, he continues to be an award-winning industry leader.

Over 14 different dishes will be served throughout the evening, in addition to a cherry blossom martini. The night will feature an impressive line-up of chefs (Tojo included), from Vancouver icons like RawBar at the Fairmont Pacific Rim, Seventeen89, and two Vancouver Foodie Tour favourites:Miku Restaurant and Bella Gelateria. If you haven’t had a chance to try Miku’s flame-seared sushi, this might just be the perfect opportunity. I’ve heard that Salmon, Ebi, and Saba will all be on-site! As always, Gelato Maestro, James, is gearing up for the occasion in style with a Sakura (salted cherry) gelato (using cherry blossoms from Tokyo) and Japanese plum wine sorbetto.

Sakura Night is sure to be an impactful one, as it is $150 to attend (with a $100 tax credit). However, it’s not often that the public is invited to enjoy an experience filled with such culinary acclaim and cultural significance, and it’s clear that The Cherry Blossom Festival intends to deliver. If you are making an appearance, don’t forget your pink tie! (Just kidding, they’ve specified that “pink tie attire” is simply more casual than black tie attire!)

For a full listing of Cherry Blossom Events, click here.

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Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival

Sakura Night

Sakura Night 2014 poster

Get your tickets now for Sakura Night, an extraordinary dining experience to celebrate Spring hosted by Tojo’s Restaurant, featuring sensational Japanese cuisine created by Tojo’s Restaurant, Zen Japanese Restaurant, RawBar at Fairmont Pacific Rim, Seventeen89, Miku Restaurant and Zakkushi!

Guests will be welcomed with taiko and walk into the elegant Japanese ambience of Tojo’s, illuminated with cherry blossom video projection.

When: Sunday, March 30, 2014 from 6:30 PM to 9:00 PM

Where: Tojo’s Restaurant on 1133 W Broadway, Vancouver, B.C.

Get your tickets now.

 

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Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival

Ornamental Cherries in Vancouver (2014 edition)

Cover - Ornamental cherries in Vancouver

The Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival and Durante Kreuk Ltd. are pleased to present the new 2014 enlarged edition of the indispensable guide to Ornamental Cherries in Vancouver, written by Douglas Justice, Associate Director & Curator of Collections at UBC Botanical Garden.

This 124-page third limited edition boasts:

  • An additional 19 cultivars, bringing the total to 54 different varieties of flowering cherry trees that can be found in Vancouver neighbourhoods
  • New Japanese index

Purchase online now via PayPal for $30.63 (final price includes 5% tax, shipping and handling fees) or in person at the VanDusen Botanical Garden Shop for $25.00.

Book launch 

Don’t miss the book launch Tuesday, November 26, 2013 at the VanDusen Botanical Garden’s Visitor Centre.

Meet Douglas Justice at the Media Book Launch event held at VanDusen Botanical Garden’s Visitor Centre, with speeches by Malcolm Bromley, General Manager of Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation, and Consulate General Okada from the Japanese Consul General in Vancouver on Tuesday, November 26, starting at 10am.

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Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival

Recommended Readings

Recommended books about cherry blossoms:

Ornamental cherries in Vancouver, by Douglas Justice

Ornamental Cherries in Vancouver, by Douglas Justice

Flowering cherries, by Geoffrey Chadbund

Flowering Cherries, by Geoffrey Chadbund.

Japanese Flower cherries, by Wybe Kuitert

Japanese Flowering Cherries, by Wybe Kuitert.

Trees of Vancouver, By Gerald Bane Straley

Trees of Vancouver, by Gerald Bane Straley.

Ornamental Cherries by Collingwood Ingram

Ornamental Cherries, by Ingram Collingwood.

Thank you to Douglas Justice for providing this list of resources during the Blossom Biology workshop at VanDusen Garden.

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Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival

Bike the Blossoms

Biking the Blossoms at the Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival (Old Pond Comics)

Come Bike the Blossoms with us this Saturday April 27 2013.

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Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival

Sakura Illumination Tour (April 24)

Sakura Illuminatino tour

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Films Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival

Bike Dance in Blossoms

I love this creative stop-motion video “Bike Dance in Blossoms” created by B:C:Clettes during Bike the Blossoms in 2012.

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Photos Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival

Bike the Blossoms

Bicycle with cherry petals

Are you ready to Bike the Blossoms this Saturday April 27?

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Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival

Bike the Blossoms

Bike the Blossom 2013

Join Velopalooza and the Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival for a fun, free guided bike ride under the cherry blossoms on Saturday, April 27.

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Photos Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival

Blossom Biology workshop

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The Blossom Biology workshop took place at the VanDusen Botanical Garden classroom in the evening of April 11, 2013.

Douglas Justice, a technical advisor for the Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival, came in with a bucket full of cherry blossoms that he had collected from the garden!

He started the session with a presentation during which we learnt about:

  1. Resources
  2. Cherry look-alike
  3. Photographing cultivars for ID purposes
  4. How to use the dichotomus key
  5. Important identification features
  6. Common cultivars

Blossom Biology with Justice Douglas (April 11, 2013)

Then, he laid out the various cultivars of cherry blossoms on the table and we got to see them up close and identify them.

Blossom Biology with Justice Douglas (April 11, 2013)

I’ve learnt a lot about cherry trees. Did you know that 80% of cherry trees are grafted? It’s a nursery practice to take a seedling cherry and to graft it to a stomp (from which many branches will grow). This explains the odd appearance of the trunk.

Blossom Biology with Justice Douglas (April 11, 2013)

Are you able to identify the different types of cherry blossoms in that bucket?

  • Tai Haku, aka Great White Cherry (top right, green leaves and big white flowers… up to 5 cm large!)
  • Beni-shidare, aka weeping cherry (at the very top, teeny tiny pink flowers, they’re the most common in the garden)
  • Yae-beni-shidare, aka double weeping cherry  (left side, branch of dark pink blossoms drooping)
  • Akebono
  • Japanese flowering cherries
  • Kiku-shidare-zakura, aka chrysanthemum cherry
  • and many more.

There are 35 cherries in the book Ornamental Cherries in Vancouver but Douglas Justice says they’ve identified 20 more cultivars since.  Aren’t we lucky to have so many cherry trees in Vancouver?

Tip: For more information about cherry tree identification and other things we’ve learnt at the workshop, type “Blossom Biology” in the search box on the left to view other posts on the subject.