Sakura Park, in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of Manhattan, got its name from the 2,000 cherry trees that were sent to New York City’s parks from Japan in 1912. Nearby, the Riverside Park Cherry Walk has cherry trees that run alongside the path from 100th Street to 125th Street, and Marcus Garvey Park, in Harlem, has a smaller walkway of cherry trees near the entrance on 5th Avenue and 124th Street.
Most of the cherry trees in Central Park are found between 72nd Street and 96th Street. There are 35 Yoshino trees on the East Side of the Central Park Reservoir (and plenty of pink cherry trees on the West Side), and the park has lots of other popular spots — including Cherry Hill, Pilgrim Hill, the Great Lawn and Cedar Hill — listed on its website.
Downtown, there are usually late blooming Kwanzan trees in Union Square and Madison Square Park (where you can also spot one Yoshino tree along 5th Avenue), and several Yoshino trees that bloom in Washington Square Park.
In the Bronx, the New York Botanical Garden has more than 200 cherry trees on its grounds, including a row of the pink weeping variety near the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory. The garden’s Spring Bloom Tracker shows the current status of cherry blossoms, magnolias, daffodils, azaleas, peonies, lilacs and roses. Pelham Bay Park also has Yoshino cherry trees near the City Island Bridge.
Randalls Island is having a Cherry Blossom Festival on May 1, but the trees will be in bloom before then near the island’s Urban Farm and Fields 62 and 63. Roosevelt Island, between Manhattan and Queens, has its own collection of cherry trees that can be seen along the island’s West Promenade.