TOO
Member
Hi all,
I visited Japan this summer as part of a conference. Fortunately, I managed to take out a couple of days for traveling. Some of that time I spent hunting ADA stuff in Tokyo. See the result here: http://www.ukaps.org/forum/threads/ada-prices-in-japan.30535/. On a more cultural note, I had one day in Kyoto. The temples and castles made a huge impression, but from an aquascaper's point of view the gardens surrounding these were no less interesting, not least because they are highly suggestive of the origins of what we call aquascaping. For me one of the beautiful things about aquascaping is how this hobby sensitizes your eyes to natural detail. I include just a handful of pictures. I hope you enjoy.
The use of rocks, water, and trees and plants is a staple of Japanese gardening. Note the combination of trees, ferns and mosses in the center of the picture.
A path of stones running through a garden. I am not sure of this sometimes becomes a small stream or is just for aesthetic purposes.
I thought "iwagumi" when I saw this. This was just one of three arrangements.
A sign explaining the arrangements. If anyone out there reads Japanese, I would be interested in knowing what it says.
Stones, trees and water again. It all looks natural, but every tree appears sensitively pruned and shaped.
On a final note: In the garden at Nijo castle there were a group of trees said to be descendants of trees that survived the bomb at Hiroshima (they were just 1.3 kilometers from the center of the blast). A moving statement in the midst of a garden, which for me is a testament to man's capacity of beauty and good.
Thomas
I visited Japan this summer as part of a conference. Fortunately, I managed to take out a couple of days for traveling. Some of that time I spent hunting ADA stuff in Tokyo. See the result here: http://www.ukaps.org/forum/threads/ada-prices-in-japan.30535/. On a more cultural note, I had one day in Kyoto. The temples and castles made a huge impression, but from an aquascaper's point of view the gardens surrounding these were no less interesting, not least because they are highly suggestive of the origins of what we call aquascaping. For me one of the beautiful things about aquascaping is how this hobby sensitizes your eyes to natural detail. I include just a handful of pictures. I hope you enjoy.
The use of rocks, water, and trees and plants is a staple of Japanese gardening. Note the combination of trees, ferns and mosses in the center of the picture.
A path of stones running through a garden. I am not sure of this sometimes becomes a small stream or is just for aesthetic purposes.
I thought "iwagumi" when I saw this. This was just one of three arrangements.
A sign explaining the arrangements. If anyone out there reads Japanese, I would be interested in knowing what it says.
Stones, trees and water again. It all looks natural, but every tree appears sensitively pruned and shaped.
On a final note: In the garden at Nijo castle there were a group of trees said to be descendants of trees that survived the bomb at Hiroshima (they were just 1.3 kilometers from the center of the blast). A moving statement in the midst of a garden, which for me is a testament to man's capacity of beauty and good.
Thomas
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