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Kazimiera
12-26-2016, 06:59 PM
This Bonsai tree is 391 years old and it survived Hiroshima

Source: https://www.indy100.com/article/bonsai-tree-1625-three-hundred-year-old-hiroshima-japan-us-latest-7495076

https://static.independent.co.uk/s3fs-public/styles/story_large/public/thumbnails/image/2016/12/25/11/01bonsai.ngsversion.1438808108285.adapt-.945.1.jpg

The tree above was planted in 1625. It resides in the US National Arboretum in Washington, having been donated in 1976 as a gift to the United States by Bonsai master Masaru Yamaki.

What was unknown, until 2001 when Yamaki’s grandsons visited the exhibition, is that the tree and Yamaki survived the Hiroshima nuclear bomb in 1945 which killed 140,000 people.

Yamaki, his family and the tree had all been indoors and a safe distance from the effects of the bomb, a detail which was unknown about the history of the specimen until the visit.

The story goes that Yamaki's grandsons, Shigeru (21) and Akira (20) approached an on-duty volunteer that day, Yoshiko Tucker, asking her in Japanese for directions to where their grandfather’s bonsai might be found - after which they revealed the history of the Bonsai, given to the museum before their birth.

The tree, a white pine (pinus parvifolia), was recently the subject of a reddit post which attracted a large amount of attention due to the age of the tree and its history.

https://i.imgur.com/2sRHE31l.jpg

Kathleen Emerson-Dell, assistant curator at the museum, told National Geographic the tree was not given in connection to the events in Hiroshima in 1945:


It was a gift of friendship, and connection—the connection of two different cultures.

There’s some connection with a living being that has survived on this earth through who knows what.

I’m in its presence, and it was in the presence of other people from long ago.

It’s like touching history.

Profileid
12-26-2016, 07:00 PM
That's pretty amazing

Hadouken
12-26-2016, 07:02 PM
I like Broccoli

Newsboy
12-26-2016, 07:12 PM
Cool, thanks for sharing :thumb001:. Japan is known for its longevity.

Kazimiera
12-26-2016, 07:44 PM
I looked up some historical events to try and put how old this tree is into perspective.

The tree was born in the same year that the Dutch founded New York (then New Amsterdam).

When the US declared independence from Britain (1776) the tree was 151 years old!
When the first settlement was established in Australia (1788) the tree was 163 years old!
When the New York Stock Exchange was started (1792) was 167 years old!
When Napoleon was defeated at Waterloo, and was exiled to St. Helena (1815) the tree was 190 years old!!!
When Antarctica was discovered (1820) the tree was 195 years old!
When the American Civil War started (1861) the tree was 236!!
When the Suez Canal was opened (1869) the tree was 244!!