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Friday, November 25, 2016

Kyoto gardens-1

     I recently returned from touring 33 gardens in Kyoto, Japan--almost all connected with Buddhist temples.  As I am a moss aficionado, I was most interested in how they use moss in Japan.  I identified most of them.  Most mosses I saw can be found in my state of Wisconsin, though the most common one, Polytrichum commune, is only rarely found in southern Wisconsin, where I live.
     As the Japanese have a reputation for order and a clean environment, I was surprised and disappointed to find that, in general, maintenance of the mosses was fair to poor.  Only four gardens had what I would call good maintenance--few or no weeds, bare spots, debris, etc.
     I will display my photos in several different posts, as there are so many.  So, it will take several weeks before I post them all.  And there will be a further delay, as I will be on a trip to Arizona all next week.
     Photo 1 is from Gio-ji, probably the best maintained garden I saw. 
     Photo 2-4 are from Saiho-ji, the most famous moss garden in Japan.  It is also called Kokedera, which means Moss Temple in English.  Koke is moss in Japanese.  It is huge, with four acres of moss in a rolling wooded area with a pond.  It cost about $30 to visit, and about 110 people tour at ten in the morning and another 110 in the afternoon.  So, with over $6000 in revenue a day, one would expect better maintenance that I saw. 
     Ryogen-in appears in Photo 5.
     Photo 6 shows Obai-in, my favorite moss garden in Japan.  I also visited it in April 2014, but now it even looks better as the Polytrichum mosses look greener, better than in spring when they brown up somewhat.
     Photos 7&8 are from Korin-in.  Photo 9 is from Koto-in.  Photo 10 is from Anraku-ji.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Saturday, November 19, 2016

Ideas from Japan

     I returned yesterday from Japan, where I spent eight days visiting a hard-to-believe 33 gardens in Kyoto, almost all in Buddhist temples.  I need a vacation!!  In April 2014 I visited 26 gardens in Kyoto, and this time I paid repeat visits to only six.  Thus, after visiting 50 gardens I think I have some ideas how to improve my small (5,000-square-foot) Japanese-style garden. 
     One idea I picked up late this summer after reading an article by Tamao Goda in Sukiya Living, The Journal of Japanese Gardening.  Goda, a native of Japan, criticized the use of odd-numbered rock grouping common in North American Japanese-style gardens as looking too artificial and prominent.  It was exactly what I installed in my garden years ago, so I looked at it carefully.  I decided she was right, so more work to do.  I had three groups of five rocks each, all black volcanic stones from California, commonly called feather rock, as they are so light.  They were located between boxwoods in a bed of raked gravel, commonly seen in Zen gardens to represent the sea.  I was happy that in recent years moss appeared on several of the rocks, adding to the ancient look so desirable in Japanese gardens.  It so happened that just 15 feet away from them there was an area that I planned to build some sort of garden between a bench and a mound of moss already in place.  That turned out to be the perfect place to move the 15 rocks.  I used to have several hostas in that area, so they were removed.  Moss will be the primary plant in the area around the rocks, with a few small ferns added next spring.  Hostas are rarely used in gardens in Japan.  In over 50 gardens, I found only four using hostas.  I once read the Japanese consider them to be weeds.
     The first two photos show the garden last year, before I replaced the last Japanese juniper with a boxwood.  The third photo shows the load of rocks I bought at a quarry in Marathon County in central Wisconsin.  The rock is called an amphibolite, a metamorphic rock whose origin was either a mudstone composed of volcanic ash fall or a basalt.  I have that same rock in other areas of my Japanese-style garden, so I like the repetition created by replacing the volcanic rocks with the amphilobytes.  Instead of using a small number of separated rocks as before, I randomly piled fifteen or so to make it look more natural.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

"Good" pollution

     My neighbor was burning leaves recently.  It made for some nice photos.  So I coughed a lot, not a serious problem.
 

Saturday, November 5, 2016

Aliens have landed!

     I just figured out why nobody has ever seen aliens from outer space.  They are so tiny that they are mistaken for tiny bugs.  I discovered a "flying saucer" in one of my moss containers.  It is less than three inches in diameter, so the aliens must be about the size of mites.