How to get Sakura flower trees in Animal Crossing: New Horizon

Animal Crossing: New Horizons covers the seasons. Working in real time, much of the gameplay varies depending on the seasons. The objects to be manufactured, the fish to hang, the plants and insects to catch change with the season. Some are changing during the season. For those of the northern hemisphere, the game came out at the beginning of spring. In the southern hemisphere, it's autumn.

Cherry trees in bloom, or Sakura in Japan, are a seasonal delight. And they are Animal Crossing: New Horizons. get them is quite simple and beautiful.

Animal Crossing : New Horizons - O Início (Gameplay PT-BR Português no Nintendo Switch)

How to get cherry blossoms in Animal Crossing: New Horizons

The good news is that you already have them. The bad news is that beautiful pink petals depend entirely on the season.

Each island comes with three types of trees: cedar, hardwood and fruit. For the purposes of this guide, we care solely hardwood. The hardwoods are generic appearance trees that do not produce fruit. They may seem like a nuisance compared to your pears, cherries and apple trees, but do not neglect them. Not only do they provide a good amount of wood, but in the last few months of spring, green leaves turn into pink flowers driving around the island.

The seasons are reversed between the hemispheres. Each season extends over three months. For example, in the northern hemisphere, spring is March, April and May. In the southern hemisphere, spring is September, October and November. In the northern hemisphere, the flowering cherry season begins in April, the second month of spring. We are not quite sure, but it should follow the same scheme for the southern hemisphere and start in October. When you start the game at the beginning of the flower cherry season, Isabelle (or Tom Nook, according to your level of play) will announce it as part of the daily news.

If you wait with impatience the pink flowers, do not give in to temptation and delete all those annoying genuine hardwood trees to save space. Set aside in a park or amassings them on your personal property to see their beauty in the coming months.

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