Körsbärsblommans Dag - Cherry Blossom Day
Sunday, 27. April 2008, 19:57:52
Saturday, the 19'th, I met some friends on Serieteket in Kulturhuset ( it's like a library for comics and manga). Then we went to Kungsträdgården. In this park in Stockholm, it's held some kind of Japanese event every year, to celebrate the cherry trees. This involves a lot of stuff. Here is the translated programme for that day:
13.00 Traditional drumming with Taiko Kai13.30 "Cherry Blossoms and Gardens"
Onita Wass, vice head of Östasiatiska muséet (East Asian Museum).
13.40 Anette Stridh and Angela Wannbäck sings
Madame Butterfly and other operas
Pianist: Ann-Sofi Klingberg
14.10 Park architect Bodil Hammarberg, Trafikkontoret,
talks about Kungsträdgården's cherry trees
14.15 Kimono showing with music by the Japanese string instrument KOTO
14.35 Sakura, Japanese female choir
14.45 Lars Göran Carlson reads Haiku poems
15.10 Kenshou gives a show in KYUDO - Japanese archery

We were there before the drumming started, so we went to Östasiatiska Meséet's (East Asian Museum) tent. We tasted green tea and made cherry blossom origamis. It wasn't a real Japanese origami though, the ones working there had designed them.
Then we watched and listened to everything on the programme, eating hamburgers from Max. Much were very interesting! After the haiku poems, we went to another tent, which belonged to Kenshou Kyudo Kai. We talked to one of the archers for a while. And then we went to watch when they were shooting.
As if this day couldn't be more Japanese, we decided to visit a Japanese shop, called Japanska Torget. We wanted to buy some Ramune, which I like very much. Unfortunately, we were to late and the shop had closed. Instead we took the tube home.
I want to recommend people to take part of this event next year. And I want to thank Kungstradgården for the photos, since I forgot my camera.
If you are interested, I have updated my photo section with a lot of photos. But as I wrote, not from the Cherry Blossom Day.
Anyway, I watched your photo album and found Stockholm is an unbelievablly beautiful city!!
By opera kanta, # 5. May 2008, 14:30:17
It's nice that you think so! I'll make sure to bring my camera next time I visit Old Town, where most houses are from the 16'th to 18'th century (the basements could be tracked to the 13'th). The ones seen in my photos this far, are from the end of the 19'th/ beginning of 20'th.
By Siskan, # 5. May 2008, 17:34:24