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    Home»News

    Over 100 famous cherry trees in Washington are being chopped down. Goodbye, Stumpy

    By Pauline EdwardsMarch 22, 2024 News 4 Mins Read
    – 202403APTOPIX Washington Cherry Blossoms 64269
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    By ASHRAF KHALIL (Associated Press)

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The sun is setting on Stumpy, the twisted old cherry tree that has become a sensation on social media. This year’s cherry blossom celebrations in Washington will be the final ones for Stumpy and more than 100 other cherry trees that will be removed as part of a multiyear restoration of their Tidal Basin home.

    Beginning in early summer, groups will start replacing the decaying seawall around the Tidal Basin, the area around the Jefferson Memorial with the highest concentration of cherry trees. The work has been long overdue, as the deterioration, combined with rising sea levels, has led to Potomac waters regularly flowing over the barriers.

    The twice-daily floods at high tide not only cover some of the walking paths, they also regularly saturate some of the cherry trees’ roots. The $133 million project to reconstruct and strengthen the sea wall will take about three years, said Mike Litterst, National Park Service spokesman for the National Mall.

    “It’s definitely going to improve the visitor experience, and that’s very important to us,” Litterst said. “But most importantly, it’s going to benefit the cherry trees, who right now are every day, twice a day, seeing their roots inundated with the brackish water of the Tidal Basin.” Litterst said entire stretches of trees to the water, as wide as 100 yards, or 90 meters, have been lost and can’t be replaced “until we fix the underlying cause of what killed them in the first place.”

    Stumpy is still alive, albeit in rough condition.

    Plans call for 140 cherry trees — and 300 trees total — to be removed and turned into mulch. When the project is concluded, 277 cherry trees will be planted as replacements.

    The mulch will protect the roots of surviving trees from foot traffic and break down over time into nutrient-rich soil, “so it’s a good second life” for the trees being cut down, Litterst said.

    The National Cherry Blossom Festival is widely considered to be the start of the tourist season in the nation’s capital. Organizers expect 1.5 million people to view the pink and white blossoms this year, the most since the coronavirus pandemic. Large numbers of cherry blossom fans have already been attracted to the area as the trees entered peak bloom on March 17, several days earlier than expected.

    Stumpy gained popularity on social media during the pandemic craze of 2020. Its legacy has led to T-shirts, a calendar, and a fanbase. News of Stumpy’s final spring has prompted people to leave flowers and bourbon and had one Reddit user threatening to chain themselves to the trunk to save the tree.

    The positive development regarding Stumpy is that the National Arboretum plans to take parts of the tree’s genetic material and create clones, some of which will eventually be replanted at the Tidal Basin.

    The regular flooding at the Tidal Basin — sea levels have risen about a foot since the seawall was built in the early 1990s — is just one of the ways climate change has impacted the cherry trees. Rising global temperatures and warmer winters have caused peak bloom to creep earlier in the calendar.

    The peak bloom for 70% of Washington, D.C.'s 3,700 cherry trees was expected to start around Saturday but was announced on March 17 instead. In 2013, the peak bloom began on April 9. Leslie Frattaroli, from the Park Service, had said in February that peak bloom could regularly occur in the middle of March by 2050.

    He mentioned, “The timing is all wrong. It's causing a big chain reaction.”

    The cold snap in mid-March in the D.C. area should actually make this year’s bloom last past the predicted April 9 end.

    For tourists and cherry blossom fans, walking around the Tidal Basin to see the flowers bloom is a major experience in Washington.

    Jorge and Sandra Perez make sure to visit every year from Stafford, Virginia.

    “Yes, we have cherry blossoms in my community, but it’s a completely different feeling when you see all of them bloom together,” Sandra said. “And you can walk through, you know, the trees under it and smell it. And it’s just it’s a beautiful view.”

    They also came to look for Stumpy, having heard the legend and knowing this would be its final spring.

    “It’s actually beautiful,” Jorge said. “So it’s sad to see him leave.”

    ___

    Corrects the information to say that peak bloom started on March 17, not that it's approaching.

    ___

    Pauline Edwards

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