Japanese garden style

Striking a Chord
When I first walked the four acres of wooded ravines of what would later be christened “The Garden of Wind and Pine” at the heart of the Garvan Woodland Gardens in Hot Springs, Ark., I was both delighted and daunted by the experience. The delight came in the site’s sublime natural beauty, which reminded me of tromping through the woods as a child – an activity I enjoy to this day. As for my sense of unease, I
Back to the Garden
The gardening impulse of the Japanese is truly ancient.  In times before recorded history, sacred outdoor spaces around Shinto shrines and Buddhist temples were arranged according to this design vision.  And through more than 1,000 years of recorded history, gardens have been created and refined by priests, warriors and emperors alike in spaces both public and private. The style isn't original in the strictest sense:  In many ways, the gardens of Japan find their sources in Chinese gardening styles and landscape painting.  But the Japanese developed and refined their borrowings to fit their own national taste for subtle naturalism and elegant rusticity.  The result is an amazingly coherent and distinctive landscaping style that now can be experienced at hundreds of public gardens in Japan. The nice thing today is that you don't have to live in Tokyo to appreciate Japanese gardens - or to incorprate their principles into your designs. In fact, garden designers around the world now use the obvious elements of Japanese gardens - the stone lanterns, gravel and clipped azaleas - in naturalistic and asymmetrical settings of all shapes and sizes.  In some cases, the total look of the garden is Japanese; in others, its principles are used to