District of Columbia
Related: About this forumCherry blossoms hit near-record early peak, a sign of climate change.
Abnormally warm weather is speeding up the blooms of Washington’s famed cherry trees.
Exceptionally warm March weather propelled Washington’s cherry blossoms to their second-earliest peak bloom in more than a century of records Sunday, reflecting the growing influence of human-caused climate change on the famed trees.
“PEAK BLOOM! PEAK BLOOM! PEAK BLOOM! Did we say PEAK BLOOM?!,” the National Park Service wrote on X at 4 p.m. Sunday. “The blossoms are opening & putting on a splendid spring spectacle.”
Sunday’s peak bloom at the Tidal Basin, about two weeks earlier than normal, tied with 2000 as the second earliest on record; only the March 15, 1990, bloom came sooner in observations that date to 1921. This year’s peak bloom was so early, it preceded the official start of the National Cherry Blossom Festival, which runs from March 20 to April 14, and was also ahead of the earliest projections.
Peak bloom, the last phase of a six-stage bud development cycle, occurs when 70 percent of the cherry trees are flowering. The buds sped through this cycle in just 15 days, faster than any other year in at least the past two decades.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2024/03/17/cherry-blossoms-dc-peak-bloom-climate/?

Think. Again.
(21,512 posts)SeattleVet
(5,652 posts)The Asian pear trees are fully budded out and should be blooming over the next few days.
Yeah, it's pretty early for these in this area, too.
IronLionZion
(47,923 posts)There are cherry blossoms everywhere, not just the Tidal basin
Old Crank
(5,332 posts)In Munich. Mid March in Munich.
It is crazy.