In early February, an unexpected cold wave in Kamakura left a quiet but lasting mark on the plants we had carefully grown over the years.
In early February, around the time of the general election, the temperature in Kamakura dropped to around −5°C.
The cold lasted for several days, and many of the plants we had been nurturing ended up dying.
In most years, it was enough to place them under the eaves, where frost would not reach.
But this time, the prolonged cold seems to have frozen the trees themselves.
They were all plants we had grown with care, and I could not bring myself to simply throw them away.
So I decided to leave a record of them here.
First, the avocado trees.
My wife grew them from seeds, and some had grown to a respectable size.
It is said that it takes nearly twenty years for them to bear fruit, and after fifteen years, we had begun to wonder if we might finally see some signs of that.
We had planted about four of them and were waiting patiently.
All of them are now gone.
Perhaps we will start again from the beginning.
Next, the ponytail palm.
This one had always been remarkably resilient.
At one point, it nearly suffered from root rot when the pot became too crowded, but we managed to save it by repotting it in time.
Since then, it had been growing steadily.
And yet, one day, its leaves suddenly turned brown.
Then, the rubber plant.
I bought it cheaply somewhere around the time I moved to my current workplace and kept it beside my desk.
It weakened after being infested with scale insects.
I brought it home, removed the insects, and watered the leaves daily.
It recovered well and had been growing again—until its leaves, too, turned brown.
Finally, the bougainvillea.
These two pots were meant to one day brighten the balcony railing.
But even as spring arrived, no new buds appeared.
It seems they are gone as well.
There were others we lost too.
I cannot help but think that if only I had brought them indoors, things might have been different.



































