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Common Types
Japanese gardens might fall into one of these
styles:
- Strolling gardens, for viewing from a path
- Sitting
gardens, for contemplating from one place, such as the
tiny tsuboniwa found in machiya (traditional
wooden townhouses).
Many Zen temples feature a garden in the
karesansui (or karesenzui, kosansui, kosensui: "dry
landscape") style. These have no water, but typically
evoke a feeling of water using pebbles and meticulously raked gravel or sand.
Rocks chosen for their intriguing shapes and patterns, mosses, and low shrubs
typify the karesansui style. The garden at Ryo¯an-ji, a temple in Kyoto,
is particularly renowned.
Other gardens also use similar rocks for decoration.
Some of these come from distant parts of Japan. In addition, bamboos and
related plants, evergreens
including Japanese black pine, and such deciduous trees as maples grow
above a carpet of
ferns and mosses.
Shakkei, "borrowed scenery," is a technique
Japanese gardeners use to make a small garden seem more spacious. By judiciously
planting shrubs to
block the view of nearby structures, they encourage the viewer to look
up toward the mountains, and to think of them as part of the garden.
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