WASHINGTON (AP) — Stumpy lives on! The stunted and gnarled cherry tree that became an unlikely social media celebrity was cut down after the 2024 National Cherry Blossom Festival, along with more than ...
Editor’s note: Carol Guzy is an independent photojournalist. She was previously a staff photographer with The Washington Post and Miami Herald and is a four-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize. The ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. WASHINGTON (DC News Now) — A beloved tree named Stumpy is one of more than a hundred Japanese cherry trees that crews will remove ...
As fans of the Tidal Basin’s best-known cherry tree mourn its impending demise, many are wondering: Why can’t Stumpy — the famous stump-shaped tree — be saved? Readers commenting on a recent ...
A true superstar of the animal kingdom, Stumpy recently made headlines by achieving the Guinness World Record as the oldest living lemur in captivity. His extraordinarily long life highlights the ...
In Washington, D.C., throngs of people gather around the Tidal Basin to enjoy the peak bloom of the cherry blossom trees. Later this spring, 158 of the trees will be cut down as part of a project to ...