Hana stood at the edge of the Meguro River, her camera bag heavy on her shoulder. She was a "Sakura Scout," a self-appointed title for her mission to document the very first blossoms for her photography blog, Japanese Cuties . The name wasn't about the people, but the "cuties" of nature—the tiny, stubborn buds that dared to peek out before the official forecast.
As the sun began to dip behind the buildings of Nakameguro, Hana checked her calendar. March 7. In two weeks, this place would be impassable, crowded with thousands of tourists. But today, it was hers. She looked at her digital screen: a single, tiny pink sliver had broken through the brown casing of a bud. The first "cutie" of 2023 had arrived.
Based on this theme of a spring day in Japan, here is a story centered on that specific date. The Sakura Scout
The text "Japanese Cuties" paired with the garbled string "Ð¶â€”Ò Ð¶ÑšÂ¬ÐµÐ Â˜Ð³â€šÂÐ³Ñ“Ò Ð³Ñ“Ñ˜Ð³Ñ“â€ Ð³â€šÐˆÐ³Ñ“Ñ˜Ð³â€šÑ”" and the date March 7, 2023, appears to be a result of (often referred to as Mojibake). When decoded from UTF-8 to Shift-JIS or similar Japanese encodings, such strings typically translate to phrases like "Japanese Cuties — 2023年3月07日" (March 7, 2023).
rakuten.com/contents/usa/en-us/guide/march-events-japan/">latest cherry blossom forecasts for this year?
Hana snapped a photo of them instead. The contrast of the dark, wintry river and the bright, "kawaii" accessories of the girls captured the essence of early March in Japan. It was the "in-between" time—where the country held its breath, waiting for the pink explosion that would turn the gray city into a dreamscape.