Bored Panda works better on our iPhone app
Continue in app Continue in browser

BoredPanda Add post form topAdd Post
Tooltip close

The Bored Panda iOS app is live! Fight boredom with iPhones and iPads here.

A Winter’s Dance – Japan’s Red Crowned Cranes
User submission
3
3.1K

A Winter’s Dance – Japan’s Red Crowned Cranes

ADVERTISEMENT

The Red-Crowned Cranes – called tanchozuru in Japanese – are deeply treasured in Japan. Quite literally the stuff of legends, the beautiful birds of all varieties has long been regarded as mythical as dragons, with their fabled 1,000-year lifespan making them synonymous with happiness and longevity. There is even an ancient Japanese legend that promises whoever folds 1,000 Japanese cranes with origami technique will be granted a wish.

Today, Japan’s sole surviving community of Red-Crowned Cranes lives in a place that feels as mythically far-flung as it is desolately picturesque: the Tsurui marshes, remote and rural, on Japan’s northernmost island Hokkaido, an area tinged by iced Siberian winds (it’s considerably closer to Russia than Tokyo).

Here, a resident population of around 1,300 of the rare birds – a community painstakingly nurtured to four-figure numbers after nearly dying out entirely in early 20th century Japan – lives among its mudflats, freshwater marshes, flowing rivers and paddy fields (The total number globally – mainly in China, Korea, and Russia – is not that much higher: an estimated 2,800-plus).

The marshlands of Tsurui – located near the small city of Kushiro in eastern Hokkaido – span 45,000 acres and have become a protected sanctuary for its ever-growing community of these dancing cranes.

The most beautiful time of year to visit is during the calm, quiet winter months when the landscape – unusually flat compared to the mountainous archipelago that defines the other main islands of Japan – is shrouded in dense white snow. These winter landscapes contrast beautifully with the cranes.

Check the beautiful pictures of a Japanese winter wonderland together with the graceful cranes showing off their mating dances.

ADVERTISEMENT

More info: faune.co

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

3Kviews

Share on Facebook
Faune Magazine

Faune Magazine

Author, Community member

Read more »

This lazy panda forgot to write something about itself.

Read less »
Faune Magazine

Faune Magazine

Author, Community member

This lazy panda forgot to write something about itself.

What do you think ?
Related on Bored Panda
Related on Bored Panda
Trending on Bored Panda
Also on Bored Panda