2014. augusztus 26., kedd

Stroll in Japanese Gardens

The Suigō Sawara Aquatic Botanical Garden.




Visitors stroll in a flower garden covered by over 800,000 Shibazakura (芝桜, "lawn cherry blossom", pink moss or phlox moss in English) in full bloom during the Fuji Shibazakura Festival (富士芝桜まつり, Fuji Shibazakura Matsuri) at the foot of Mount Fuji in Fujikawaguchiko, Yamanashi Prefecture, on May 8, 2014. (Photo by Kazuhiro Nogi / AFP / Getty Images) — with Az-zahraa Za and Mai Plazo Olango.







Hida Folk Village (飛騨の里, Hida-no-sato) ~ Takayama City, Gifu Prefecture.
Hida Minzoku Mura (飛騨民俗村, Hida Folk Village) is an open air museum recreating Hida’s historical look (Hida is an old province located in the area of Gifu Prefecture). It features traditional houses and buildings which were dismantled at their original sites throughout the region and rebuilt here in 1971. The massive gasshō-zukuri (合掌造り) farmhouses, named after their steep thatched roofs which resemble a pair of hands joined in prayer ("gassho"), were moved from nearby Shirakawago. In folk art schools, you can make traditional Hida folk art. (Photo: djoser.nl)







"Zen & Blossom" ~ The garden of Kōdai-ji (高台寺), a temple of the Rinzai school of Zen Buddhism in Higashiyama-ku, Kyoto. (Photo by Yoshi Shimamura, 2012)





Kyoto



Tatton Park :






Japanese gardens (日本庭園 ) are traditional gardens that create miniature idealized landscapes, often in a highly abstract and stylized way.The gardens of the Emperors and nobles were designed for recreation and aesthetic pleasure, while the gardens of Buddhist temples were designed for contemplation and meditation.












Spring flowers on a hillside, Hokkaido :



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