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Monday, December 26, 2016

Kyoto 4--Sennyu-ji and Chinsaku-in

     Getting back to Japan, here are two temple gardens that have flat moss gardens, making for less interest.  The first six photos are of Sennyu-ji, which does have a nice small moss garden with impressive black rocks.  Some critics say such rock placement, in a vertical position, is amateurish and unnatural.  In nature, virtually all rocks are in the horizontal position, gravity having its way.  An occasional display of vertical rocks does not bother me, as it looks interesting and impressive.
     The other photos were of Chinsaku-in, which had an impressive display of Japanese maples in their fall color.  They had one large moss area which was incredibly beautiful in the late afternoon, when I was there just before closing.
 
 
 
 

 
 Below: Chinsaku-in
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Monday, December 19, 2016

More snow

     Since the first photos of my Japanese garden, 10 more inches fell, making 20" for the month.  Here are a few more photos of the garden.
     The tree with the exfoliating bark is Acer griseum, or paperbark maple.  It can reach 30 feet in height with a 20-foot spread.
 
 
 
 
 
 

Saturday, December 17, 2016

Winter is here.

     After an unusually warm fall, winter suddenly arrived recently.  The first snow arrived December 4th, seven inches fell on December 11th, and another six inches fell yesterday.
     The snow adds considerable interest to the gardens, it makes me feel a bit sorry for those who live in southern climes.  Photos are nice, but one has to be here to fully appreciate the beauty provided by the snow.  The last three photos of "sagging snow" were taken after the snow melted a bit.
     The photos were all taken in my Japanese-style garden.  More will follow in a week or two.  I still have three more postings of my photos from Japan, so I hope no one gets impatient for them.
 
 
 
 
 
 

Monday, December 12, 2016

Kyoto 3--Tofuku-ji and Komyo-in

     Tofuku-ji is one of my favorite temples in Japan, visiting it in 2014 and last month.  It has a deep ravine on its edge, making for beautiful landscapes, with a great deal of superb Japanese maples.  It has a raked-gravel artificial sea with mounded moss areas, rare in the 56 gardens I visited in Japan.  The moss on those areas is Polytrichum commune, the most common moss used in Japan.  It looked beautiful in November, but it was largely brown when I visited in April 2014, likely the effect of winter conditions.  I thought the checkerboard moss garden was a bit hokey.
     The last two photos were taken in nearby Komyo-in temple.  It was much smaller and better maintained, without the weeds, leaves, and debris of the heavily visited Tofuku-ji.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Monday, December 5, 2016

Kyoto 2--Shoren-in and Eikan-do Temples

     Here is the second of a planned six postings of my tour of 33 gardens in Kyoto, Japan I took a few weeks ago.
     The first two photos are of Shoren-in temple.
     The last eight photos are of Eikan-do, one of the better gardens I visited.  The colors of the Japanese maples were incredible.  It was the only garden I visited of 56 (in 2014 and this year combined) that I saw an irrigation system for the mosses.  Some ladies, even young ones, still like to dress up in traditional kimonos, which added to the beauty of the gardens for me.
 
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

      

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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