Spring 2021, the Japan Cherry Blossom spring tour is once again canceled to the outside world, sorry. My team and I are almost positive that by spring 2022, we will be back in the field with international participants on our annual Cherry Blossom Sakura Japan photo workshop tour, and by this autumn 2021, we believe we will be open for business as Art Wolfe, and many of my other colleagues are. Many ask me why my annual Cherry Blossom photo workshop is a cross-country expedition. The reason is simple, climate change. This year in Tokyo, sakura along the Meguro River and elsewhere reached their peak or full bloom on March 26. This year and last year’s sakura bloomed almost on the same day, about three weeks earlier than average. The ancient capital, Kyoto, and the present capital, Tokyo, bloomed almost simultaneously, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency, which began collecting data on cherry blossoms in 1953. The Meteorological Agency of Japan tracks 58 “benchmark” sakura trees across Japan, and 40 of those have already reached peak bloom, and 14 did it earlier than ever before. The trees usually bloom for about two weeks each year, attracting the Mejiro bird or Japanese White-eye, which loves to eat and slurp the sweet nectar of the first cherry buds as they bloom. After two weeks of hanami, you can enjoy a spring sakura snowstorm of flower petals. Personally, this time of year, I love to be in the Tsubame onsen, in the divine natural milky white hidden onsen off the beaten path which has very few visitors, and during the full moon, it’s especially Zen.