Friday 29 February 2008

Dai Sugi


After a slightly aimless start, here's the first in a series on trunks: Cryptomeria japonica grown in the dai sugi or kitayama sugi style, at Ise Jingu. 
The trees are cut at knee height, and the new growth is 'raised' (the lower branches are removed) mimicking the way the trees are grown in an area of forestry north of Kyoto (Kitayama, hence the name). Because the lower branches are removed every year, the wood never develops knots, and the resulting timber is dead straight and clean. It's tradtionally usd in the tokonoma (family altar)
In the garden, the balance between the big old trunks at the bottom, and the ever-changing arrangement of newer poles above, creates an interesting yin yang sort of thing, a bit ike old coppice or pollard trees in Europe. 

Thursday 28 February 2008



I'm a big fan of plane trees, especially on the continent where they're often pruned for shade. 
Aix en Provence, and a road somewhere in Provence. 
I wouldn't call these niwaki, but they do something similar, giving the tree an extra layer of character, somewhere in the grey area between nature and man.

Wednesday 27 February 2008

pollarded plane


Has anyone seen a wider-spreading plane tree than this one, in Provence?

Tuesday 26 February 2008

Black Pine


Black pine (Pinus thunbergii) in someone's front garden, Osaka.

Monday 25 February 2008

Cupressus glabra

Frosty Cupressus glabra, yew twmps and stone stacks down in Dorset. 
All my own work!

Sunday 24 February 2008

Monkaburi



Japanese Black Pine (pinus thunbergii) trained over an entranceway in the monkaburi style. Rural Osaka. 
In the second image, look at the new extension being trained up on the right.







Saturday 23 February 2008

Gordes

Terraced gardens at the hill-top village of Gordes, Provence.

Churchyard yews


Organic yew hedge, a churchyard somewhere in Shropshire.

Friday 22 February 2008

Shisendo-in


Shisendo-in, Kyoto.
One of my favorite gardens in Kyoto, tucked away in the foothills to the NE of the city, it's full of remarkable evergreen azalea karikomi (clipped shrubs) that create entire landscapes within the garden. Come May and June, the whole lot erupts in an explosion of pink, red and white flowers, but for the rest of the year it's kept well clipped. The gardeners use long handled shears and traditional bamboo tripod ladders, but most gardeners nowadays use modern aluminium ones.