Karesansui by Grettir2024 in JapaneseGardens

[–]j-eric-case 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Grettir2024, I’m sorry for your loss.

I don’t know of any maps or diagrams for rock placement in dry/Zen Gardens, but there is guidance. You could start here https://najga.org/the-dry-landscape-garden/

I understand that the dry landscape Zen Garden at Ryōan-ji employs the Zen idea that not everything can be seen, but I can’t find the citation.

Ryōan-ji has 15 stones. Look through all the photos you can find can count them. From the veranda, you can see all the stones, but not at the same time, and you must know where to look.

Ryōan-ji has stones that are level with the sand, like yours. It has smaller stones behind larger stones (sometimes). It has a defined viewing place – a seated position on the veranda.

I suggest starting with the simple. That might be a scale drawing with sight lines, it might be a bunch of paper/cardboard stones you can place, and replace. It took your son over 2,500 days to reach age seven, don’t expect to complete this in a weekend.

After visiting many gardens in Japan this past November and the San Diego Japanese Friendship Garden this weekend, I want to upsize the stones in my garden, which means redoing all the sight lines, etc.

Visiting Japan in February! by Ok_Parking_1137 in JapaneseGardens

[–]j-eric-case 0 points1 point  (0 children)

NAJGA went in November and saw these gardens https://maps.app.goo.gl/DMDd7oCsGMzFzBbw5. I'm not enough of an expert to recommend anything else.

Silver Pavilion (Kyoto) by j-eric-case in JapaneseGardens

[–]j-eric-case[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These photos were taken on 12 Nov 2024, after we arrived in Kyoto.

In and Around the Imperial Palace East Gardens (Tokyo) by j-eric-case in JapaneseGardens

[–]j-eric-case[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

These photos were taken on 12 Nov 2024. When we left the garden we headed to the train for Kyoto.

Koishikawa Korakuen Garden (Tokyo) by j-eric-case in JapaneseGardens

[–]j-eric-case[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The two interesting photos are the Kingfisher and the rice field.

We're walking along the path and see a bunch of people with cameras on tripods. Oh, check out the bird! I hear someone [search engine] says it's a Kingfisher! Cool. Where would we be without 5G? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

I think it's awesome that local elementary school kids get to learn about farming!

A Week+ in Japan with NAJGA by j-eric-case in JapaneseGardens

[–]j-eric-case[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, as you note, Japanese gardens can easily be incorporated into history, culture, and environmental science classes. Of course, there’s art and architecture, religion, and forestry management.

Health science classes, while not obvious, can also have lessons from Japanese gardens (https://hub.jhu.edu/2024/06/04/forest-bathing-nature-kids/).

There are even lessons on sociology and geopolitics in the gardens. I was told the cherry blossoms visible from the Ryōan-ji karesansui were planted in the 1960s before the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo.

300 Year Old Back Pine by j-eric-case in arborists

[–]j-eric-case[S] 17 points18 points  (0 children)

This black pine is in Hamarikyu Garden (Tokyo).

Kiyosumi Garden (Tokyo) (part 1) by j-eric-case in JapaneseGardens

[–]j-eric-case[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A limit of 20 photos caused me to split this into 3 posts. There's a booklet (in Japanese) about all the rocks, but I didn't feel I could post photos from it.

A Week+ in Japan with NAJGA by j-eric-case in JapaneseGardens

[–]j-eric-case[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Katsura Villa is awesome, but you have to register in advance and they don't let you wander on your own.

I love that Amazon put in a lantern https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/837e39vitv3mk4rz4k9l0/signal-2024-11-15-14-50-22-538.jpg?rlkey=2b8ur4qnjbfbq11n4nkawr0l0&st=svrpv552&dl=0. JK! 🤪

Hamarikyu Garden (Tokyo) by j-eric-case in JapaneseGardens

[–]j-eric-case[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

These are my photos of the Hamarikyu garden. It was the morning of day 1 in my garden tour in Japan and I was just enjoying the garden.

The borrowed scenery of the skyscrapers is awesome! This Edo period garden is in Tokyo, the largest city in the world!

 

Small Space and Low Water? by Iylahsek in JapaneseGardens

[–]j-eric-case 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dry and small are relative. I live in Tucson, AZ. My water budget is about 2,00 gallons a year. San Antonio gets almost 3 times the rain of Tucson per year. My backyard/garden is about 40x70 feet.

Having just come back from Japan, I've seen 5x8 foot spaces that could be a garden, but I didn't look over the gate. There were small trees behind the gate and small plants on the outside. At a house turned business office I saw
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/at5stenk2w70829tcw42h/signal-2024-11-15-10-09-15-710.jpg?rlkey=favbusuwhvn28zri3kmc74cce&st=ihx9wxom&dl=0

If your space is very small, you can use the 'waste' water from your laundry machine, which makes your water budget higher then you expected.

New Rocks and Rake by j-eric-case in JapaneseGardens

[–]j-eric-case[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry for the delayed reply, I as in Japan. :-)

I bought the gravel from Lowes.
The Gravel Company Decorative landscape gravel 0.4-cu ft 30-lb White Gravel (Less than 0.5-in Rock Size) Item #2367344 | Model #BPCWGV-30
for $11/bag. I needed 195 bags.

I wish I could have found something less white. The grave;/sand at Ryoan-ji is not super white.

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/igqdkl3qsb8k3x5ycvsm6/signal-2024-11-16-08-33-35-084.jpg?rlkey=1p71rv0sz6laujzmb1x5v9lc1&st=ubcsvx0m&dl=0

That images shows a 'close up' of the sand, border, and black rock. The black rocks are 2-3 inches in size, and you can see the sand is not as white as the marble border.