There is a certain moment each year when the courtyard changes character almost overnight. The Japanese cherry tree — now more than ten years old, and originally a birthday gift — suddenly moves from being part of the background to becoming the centre of attention. Jeanne and I have, almost without deciding it, turned this into a small tradition. Marking the few days where it stands in full bloom. It is beautiful every year. And yet never quite the same. Perhaps that is part of the appeal — the predictability of the event, combined with the unpredictability of how it actually unfolds. Light, temperature, timing. All the small variables that resist planning. There is also something slightly paradoxical about it. A tree planted as something permanent, yet most striking precisely in its most transient state. It does, admittedly, need pruning again soon. Which is perhaps another way of saying that even traditions require a bit of maintenance.

05/03/2026 18:30:38


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