Where To Put A Pagoda In The Japanese Garden
We've loved Japanese gardens since 1910, when the Japan-British exhibition brought eight million people to London to thrill at show gardens of miniature Mount Fujis and blazing acer, or maple, trees.
In the subsequent craze for Japanese gardens, the English aristocracy shipped boulders, trees and entire buildings from the Far East to fill their acres with tea houses, ornamental bridges and impeccably raked gravel. More than a hundred years on, Japanese gardens continue to enthral us and have never felt more contemporary. Often featuring a simple palette of peaceful greens, rocks, gravel and water with meandering paths and secluded spaces to sit quietly, they are places for calm and contemplation, and an escape from the stresses of modern life.
Here are a few easy Japanese garden ideas to help you create your own Zen masterpiece.
Let it breathe
In the West, we tend to pack our gardens with plants in every corner, but Japanese gardens see the beauty in restraint. Less is most definitely more. For an easy Japanese garden idea, planting a single potted maple 'Sango-kaku' in full autumn finery, underplanted by Japanese forest grass or placed in an area of gravel makes all the impact you'll need. Allow space around specimen shrubs and trees to show off their natural form.
RHS/Tim Sandall
Clip top
A backdrop of evergreens creates a calm atmosphere year-round. Skimmia, hebes, Japanese holly (Ilex crenata), yew and Pittosporum tenuifolium 'Golf Ball' are all ideal candidates and can be clipped neatly to create strong shapes. Niwaki hand tools are so beautiful that you'll be searching for something to clip the minute you unwrap them. Cloud-pruned trees, show poodles in tree form, are showstoppers that take many years to train and are expensive as a result. Dwarf pine trees (Pinus sylvestris 'Watereri' and Pinus mugo, try paramountplants.co.uk) are much cheaper and can be highly sculptural if you lift the canopy by pruning off the bottom branches.
RHS/Sarah Cuttle
All the greens
Bamboo creates instant atmosphere against a fence, and yellow-and black-stemmed varieties (Phyllostachys aurea and nigra) won't spread madly either. As for ground cover greens to plant under trees or shrubs, try the waving emerald Japanese forest grass or, for amore formal look, Pachysandra terminalis.
For instant impact, planting hostas and ferns are great Japanese garden ideas for your own outdoor space. Hostas look lush if you can keep the slugs off them, and ferns, with their elegant unfurling fronds, are a must. The hard fern (Blechnum spicant), common polypody (Polypodium vulgare) and stunning silvery Japanese painted fern (Athyrium niponicum) will strike the right note.
Zen Rial Getty Images
Flashes of colour
Flowers, when they do feature in Japanese gardens, are often transient and all the more beautiful for it, with bursts of bold colours set against the backdrop of verdant greens. Don't overdo it though, just one or two flowering shrubs will do the job. It may be a cherry tree in blossom or an azalea, camellia or rhododendron (go for compact Rhododendron yakushimanum for smaller gardens) in bloom.
In autumn, when the Japanese maple leaves turn, expect foliage fireworks from red to orange and butter yellow. Particularly beautiful varieties include Acer palmatum 'Bloodgood' and 'Sango-kaku', which adds bright red stems to its repertoire of fiery autumn leaves, so it looks stunning even when the branches are bare.
JennyRainbow Getty Images
mtreasure Getty Images
Make the most of moss
Japanese gardens celebrate moss and the soft, aged quality it brings. If you see moss growing on the risers of garden steps, in walls or the cracks in paving, leave it to do its thing. When planting in large pots, place cushion bun moss on the surface of the compost to make a beautiful understorey to acer trees. On a larger scale, ground cover plant, mind-your-own-business, will quickly soften the edges of paving stones to create a more natural look.
PhotoAlto/Michele Constantini Getty Images
Screen in style
Bamboo and reed screening, available from most garden centres, will set the tone and are easy to roll out and attach to your existing fence with cable ties or wire. For a more permanent solution, if budget allows, blackened timber fencing, the modern application of the ancient Japanese art of Shou Sugi Ban, makes a dramatic backdrop (try shousugiban.co.uk).
Water all around
A Japanese-style garden will almost always contain water, whether it's a still pond filled with koi carp and water lilies or a small trickling fountain. If you have limited space, a stone trough left to develop lichen and moss, or a simple rusted metal water bowl may be all the water you need. If you want to turn it into a simple water feature, place a pump inside (available from any garden centre) so the water can trickle down into the trough.
blew_i Getty Images
Be bold with boulders
Japanese gardens commonly include large stones often draped with moss or placed in raked gravel. In the Zen Buddhist tradition, in which gardens represent the natural world in a highly stylised way, large stones represent mountains and gravel the sea. Pale grey gravel in secluded seating areas and irregular shaped stepping stones on paths set a Japanese tone to the hard landscaping. See cedstone.co.uk for a selection of natural boulders and stepping stones that will look as though they have been there forever.
Japanese garden plants and shrubs to buy
Prunus mume 'Beni-chidori'
Acer palmatum 'Sango-kaku'
Skimmia japonica 'Rubella'
thompson-morgan.com
£9.99
Hebe 'Garden Beauty White' Shrubby Veronica
thompson-morgan.com
£16.99
Japanese holly (Ilex crenata)
Pittosporum tenuifolium 'Golf Ball'
Pinus sylvestris 'Watereri'
Golden Bamboo, Phyllostachys aurea
Sambucus nigra f. porphyrophylla Black Tower
Hakonechloa macra 'Aureola' Golden Hakonechloa
thompson-morgan.com
£10.99
Pachysandra terminalis 'Green Carpet'Japanese Spurge
thompson-morgan.com
£13.99
Athyrium niponicum var. pictum
Okame Cherry Blossom Tree
Azalea 'Japanese Red' Azalea japonica
thompson-morgan.com
£27.99
Camellia × williamsii 'Debbie'
Rhododendron 'Percy Wiseman'
Acer palmatum 'Bloodgood'
Acer palmatum 'Sango-kaku', Japanese Maple
thompson-morgan.com
£16.99
Soleirolia soleirolii (mind-your-own-business)
Water Lily (White) Nymphaea
thompson-morgan.com
£10.99
3 Japanese gardens you can visit
• Kyoto Garden Holland Park, London
Tiered waterfalls, a serene pond of koi carp, and peacocks too (visit parkgrandkensington.co.uk).
ablokhin Getty Images
• Tatton Park, Cheshire
One of the finest Japanese gardens in Europe, it includes a Shinto shrine, a miniature Mount Fuji with a 'snowy' top of white stones and authentic artefacts (visit tattonpark.org.uk).
• Japanese Garden, Cornwall
Raked gravel and boulders, acers, azaleas and a serene tea house await in this one-acre plot that was built as a meditative garden. A specialist Bonsai and Japanese nursery is next door so you can stock up if you've been inspired (visit japanesegarden.co.uk).
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Where To Put A Pagoda In The Japanese Garden
Source: https://www.housebeautiful.com/uk/garden/designs/a35478499/japanese-garden-ideas/
Posted by: ebytworet.blogspot.com
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