Crowds swarm to see the legendary Kenroku-en garden which has 6 attributes of a perfectly designed landscape garden: spaciousness, seclusion, artifice, antiquity, watercourses and panoramas. Originally the outer garden of the Kanazawa Castle, it’s morphed into its present configuration after the efforts of a few local lords, Harunaga, Naringara and Nariyasu between 1759 and 1874 – who added a waterfall, teahouse, and winding streams with stone bridges. Gorgeous! It takes about 1 1/2 hours to stroll through the garden’s featured areas. Got up early and started perambulating at about 7.30am. I was so glad I did, within an hour…busloads started arriving, ugh.
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I don’t know how this took off as a craze, but gold-leaf encircled ice cream cones are the latest ‘buzz’ in Kanazawa….after my stellar walk this morning, felt like a bit of brekkie was in order….
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Gokayama…has a World Heritage listing, so I thought I’d visit…at around 2000 metres, its in an alpine valley with mountains arising. Famous for being one of the villages in the area with ‘gassho-zukhuri’ farmhouses (wooden beams combined to form a steep thatched roof that resembles 2 hands together), they are ‘invaded’ daily with bus groups wanting to stroll through. Income generation a positive for the village, certainly.
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Decided to travel to Takaoka to see the Great Buddha, said to be one of Japan’s 3 largest. Impresssive! It was completed in 1933 after 3 decades of work, utilising bronze casting techniques. It stands at 15.85 metres, and weighs 65 tons.
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Running through the centre of Toyama city, is the Matsukawa river. Its lined with 500 cherry trees stretching over 2.5kms, and their blossoms should be out…unfortunately not. Boo hoo!
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My final stop for the day was the Toyama Glass Art Museum, to see some of Chihuly’s work on exhibition from Seattle and that of Ohira Yoichi, a designer from the 20thC, who was exhibiting some of his Venetian glass designs….inspired by Picasso and Chagall paintings and Murano glass blowing traditions.
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