Washington's cherry blossoms, which border the National Mall and Tidal Basin, are the nation's most renowned flowers.
You'll discover cherry blossoms in the other "Washington" throughout the country. Seattle's University of Washington has beautiful Yoshino cherry trees.
Central Park has numerous Japanese-gifted cherry tree groups. The Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Reservoir has beautiful blossoms. Riverside Park and Sakura Park are Upper West Side cherry tree parks.
Cherry blossom viewing in San Diego's 12-acre Japanese Friendship Garden in Balboa Park is best in early March.
In order to commemorate the approximately 350,000 Yoshino trees in the city's urban forest, Macon, Georgia has its own International Cherry Blossom Festival every spring.
Branch Brook Park in Newark, New Jersey, has the most Japanese blossoming cherry blossom trees in a U.S. park with 5,200 trees in 18 types.
Cherry blossoms aren't exclusive to Seattle. Portland waterfront blossoms. Salem's Oregon State Capitol mall's trees are 1 hour south.
In celebration of the city's 1,000 cherry trees, which may be found in parks and other attractive areas, Nashville has an annual cherry blossom festival.
In the early spring, visitors to Philadelphia may enjoy the city's many cherry blossom displays, notably in Fairmount Park and along the Schuylkill River.
In the early spring, visitors to Philadelphia may enjoy the city's many cherry blossom displays, notably in Fairmount Park and along the Schuylkill River.
Since 1979, Chubu University, Ohio University's partner in Kasugai, Japan, has given the Athens, Ohio, campus cherry trees.
Brooklyn Botanic Garden in Prospect Park has a stunning variety of cherry blossom trees.
In the spring, people from the Midwest can see a sea of cherry blossoms in the Traverse City, Michigan, area.
There are beautiful cherry blossom spots in Los Angeles, like Lake Balboa Park in the San Fernando Valley.
Buffalo's annual festival, which takes place in the Japanese Garden in Delaware Park, is another well-known cherry blossom festival.
Yoshino cherry trees surround quiet residential streets in Bethesda, Maryland, where Washington-area residents and tourists may enjoy cherry blossoms without the throng.