Ideas to Borrow from Japanese Gardens

Oct 11, 2024

There is a lot to learn from the long, venerable tradition of gardening in Japan, a point made in last week's Real Dirt, which focused on the history and meaning of Japanese gardens. Indeed, in Kyoto alone there are more than 50 temple and palace gardens, each one full of potential inspiration for the home gardener. Here are some takeaways:

  • “Borrow” scenery. Often the view of a surrounding hillside or natural feature will be incorporated into a Japanese garden, essentially expanding the “garden” beyond its own boundaries. If your neighbor has a beautiful tree, for example, you could prune some of your own shrubs to include a view of it in your garden (especially if their tree has beautiful spring blossoms or fall foliage). 
  • Many shades of green create a peaceful scene at Shisen-do garden in Kyoto. J.C. Lawrence
    Many shades of green create a peaceful scene at Shisen-do garden in Kyoto. J.C. Lawrence
    An all-green garden can be beautiful and interesting, as well as restful. Consider planting evergreens of various shades of green, with textural interest from different plant heights and a variety of leaf shapes and configurations. When a nearby flowering tree blossoms (like a cherry tree in spring) it will stand out all the more against its green backdrop; the same can be true of deciduous trees with beautiful fall leaf color.
  • A garden doesn't have to have plants in it! A dry garden can contain multitudes – the idea that the vast (even the whole world) can be represented in the small, controlled space of a garden is not unique to Zen Buddhism, but is often used as a guiding principle in Japanese dry gardens, where rocks can represent mountains, and raked sand the sea (as the saying goes, “the earth in a grain of sand; the sea in a drop of water”).
  • Make room for rocks (and other natural materials). And consider how the sun will fall on them at different times of day and in different seasons of the year.
  • Stone lantern amid the moss at Sanzen-in garden in Ohara, northern Kyoto. J.C. Lawrence
    Stone lantern amid the moss at Sanzen-in garden in Ohara, northern Kyoto. J.C. Lawrence
    Incorporate the principle of “shin-gyo-so”:  the use of formal, less formal, and informal materials together. This is often seen in paths and walls. For example, carefully cut and shaped blocks of granite (formal) might border a path composed of river rock (natural, informal), or formal stepping stones might be arranged in an informal pattern, so the effect is one of semi-formality.
  • Make a statement with one large piece of sculpture. The stone lanterns seen in many Japanese gardens are used primarily as sculptural elements and rarely as functioning lights.
  • Use color sparingly. Large swaths of the same color are more soothing to the eye than a jumble of bright colors.
  • Take care of your evergreens. Careful pruning and shaping can create a truly stunning work of living sculpture.
  • Consider shadow and light. If sunlight coming through the leaves of your tree casts shadows on a walkway, deck, or window covering, rejoice in that beauty.
  • Hide and reveal: place a particular plant or garden feature around a curve in a path, or on the other side of a large shrub, so that turning a corner presents the garden visitor with something previously unseen and unexpected to appreciate.

For much more on this topic, see Marc Peter Keane, Japanese Garden Design (2016). For an American woman's personal account of working in Japan's male-dominated gardening culture (though that is changing) see Leslie Buck, Cutting Back: My Apprenticeship in the Gardens of Kyoto (2017).

Why not visit a Japanese garden closer to home than Kyoto?  There are several in California, including the Shinzen Friendship Garden in Fresno; the Storrier Stearns Japanese Garden in Pasadena; SuihoEn, a Japanese Garden in Van Nuys and, of course, the Japanese Tea Garden in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park. If you are traveling to Oregon or Washington, there are fine examples in Portland (Portland Japanese Garden) and Seattle (Seattle Japanese Garden).

Want to learn about garden design in general?  Attend our two-part workshop on Landscape Design (Nov. 7 & 14), part of the Master Gardeners' Fall 2024 Workshop Series. For more information, and to register, visit our website.

UC Master Gardeners of Butte County are part of the University of California Cooperative Extension (UCCE) system.  To learn more about us and our upcoming events, and for help with gardening in our area visit our website.  If you have a gardening question or problem, email the Hotline at mgbutte@ucanr.edu or leave a phone message on our Hotline at 530-552-5812. To speak to a Master Gardener about a gardening issue, or to drop by the MG office during Hotline hours, see the most current information on our Ask Us section of our website.