| Term | Meaning | Cause | Timing | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Return bloom | Stress (drought, damage) | Autumn after a spring bloom | | Kansenka (干染め花) | Dried-dyed flower | Extreme autumn cold snap | Late autumn | | Fuyuzaki (冬咲き) | Winter-blooming | Genetic (e.g., wintersweet) | True winter | | Kikarizaki (狂い咲き) | "Crazy" or confused bloom | Abnormal warmth (false spring) | Mid-winter warm spell |
In Japanese aesthetics, kaerizaki occupies a unique, melancholic space. It is not celebrated like the explosive spring sakura , but rather appreciated as a . kaerizaki
At its heart, kaerizaki teaches a lesson in resilience. It suggests that blooming is not a one-time event tied strictly to a schedule. Whether it is a cherry tree in November or a professional reimagining their career at fifty, the "second bloom" is often more cherished precisely because it is unexpected. | Term | Meaning | Cause | Timing