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Seeking tranquility among the blossoms

FEST | D.C. wants to spread out the crowds, encourage exploration beyond Tidal Basin

April 6, 2008

WASHINGTON -- For Jake Kwon, spring doesn't begin until the city's famous cherry trees have bloomed, wrapping the Tidal Basin in a stunning canopy of pink and white petals.

Kwon thought about staying far away from the blossoms this year, though. He's grown weary of fighting traffic, traipsing through muddy grounds trampled by tourists, and trying to snap that perfect photograph with throngs of people getting in the way.

"It seems like no matter where you go, you're going to run into crowds," said Kwon, a consultant from McLean, Va.

More than a million enthusiasts are expected for Washington's 16-day National Cherry Blossom Festival, which continues through April 13. But those like Kwon, seeking a more tranquil setting to appreciate the delicate blossoms, shouldn't fret. Visitors can avoid some of the crowds with early morning jogs, lantern-lit tours at night and boat rides on the Potomac River.

The festival has become Washington's signature tourist event since it began in 1935. Executive director Diana Mayhew said to better handle the crowds, there's now interest in spreading out the time people visit the blossoms and encouraging them to explore beyond the Tidal Basin.

This year's festival includes dozens of events celebrating the 1912 gift of 3,000 cherry trees to the United States from Mayor Yukio Ozaki of Tokyo.

For the first time, the National Park Service is offering early morning "cherry chit-chat" runs. Before the busloads of tourists arrive, park ranger Rebbecca Steketee will take runners on a 3.5-mile jog that starts at the Washington Monument and continues to the Jefferson Memorial before winding around the Tidal Basin.

Along the way, Steketee will share little-known facts about the blossoms. The first trees from Japan, for instance, actually arrived in 1910, she said. Unfortunately, they were so infested with insects and disease that the Agriculture Department had them burned. Some were spared, however, and remain alive today at a nearby golf course.

Runners also will pass the peculiar "indicator tree" near the Jefferson Memorial, which got its name because it blooms about a week before the other cherry trees. "We don't know why it blooms ahead of the others," Steketee said. "It's a mystery."

Though most tourists flock to the trees during the day, savoring the blossoms after sunset can be particularly rewarding.

Another way to elude daytime crowds is to hop on a boat. Enjoying the blossoms by water has become so popular in recent years that one Washington company has started offering two-hour river cruises in which teas, sandwiches and scones are served.

AP

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