Japanese Students Send Letters on Tree Leaves and Actually Get Them Delivered


JAPANESE MAIL CARRIERS APPARENTLY DID NOT MIND DELIVERING LETTERS WRITTEN ON LEAVES. PHOTOS: COURTESY OF THE TARAYOU TREE PROJECT (LEFT); HAJIME ISHIKAWA

The students at Keio University have been mailing leaves of Ilex latifolia, a species of holly native to Japan and China, since April as part of a class project that spans science and history. Also known as tarayou … letters written on tarayou leaves go as far back as the Heian period (794-1185) and are believed to be the first postcards in Japan.

A group of university students in Tokyo has been writing letters on tree leaves and managing to get them delivered by the country’s renowned postal service with nothing more than a stamp.

The students at Keio University have been mailing leaves of Ilex latifolia, a species of holly native to Japan and China, since April as part of a class project that spans science and history.

Maho Omura, a first-year student in the group, came across the leaf of Ilex latifolia, also known as tarayou. Letters written on tarayou leaves go as far back as the Heian period (794-1185) and are believed to be the first postcards in Japan.


THIS LEAF READS: "THANK YOU, ALWAYS <3 I LOVE YOU. LET'S STAY TOGETHER, NOW AND FOREVER." PHOTO: COURTESY OF THE TARAYOU TREE PROJECT

Unlike most other tree leaves, the back of a tarayou leaf can be scratched to leave permanent black etchings. Once scratched, the surface of the leaf undergoes a Maillard reaction, the same chemical process that gives a steak or a loaf of bread its brown crust

“People said it looks like something from My Neighbor Totoro,” Mio Hirose, one of the students behind the project, told VICE World News, referring to the popular 1988 Japanese animated fantasy film.

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