Thursday, July 24, 2008

Kanazawa, Day One

Kanazawa, located on the Sea of Japan, is a castle town, the second-largest city (after Kyoto) to escape bombing in World War II. It is the prefectural capital of Ishikawa. These distinctive walls mark the Naga-machi district, where samurai had their homes.

This is inside a mid-level samurai's house--levels of prestige were measured by how many tatami mats a house held...
This lovely little garden was at the Nomura House, the home of a high-level samurai and his family. This garden has a 400-year-old bayberry tree in it. The craftsmanship was impeccable: below is a decorative ornament used to cover a nail. There were many different styles of these ornaments.
I love the tile ornaments used at the edges of roofs or on the ridge lines...
This is Kanazawa Castle, built for a shogun of the ruling Maeda clan in 1583. What you're seeing is mostly a reconstruction (fires took their toll over the years), but it's impressive nonetheless...
We ended our day's tour at Kenrokuen, a fabulous "stroll garden." Considered to be one of the top three gardens in Japan, Kenrokuen means "having six attributes," characteristics thought to create a perfect garden. These are: spaciousness, tranquility, artifice (interesting!), water, antiquity, and views. Many trees have been trained over many years with poles, as seen above.

Finally, a Shinto shrine...


We actually ended this day with an elaborate shabu-shabu meal, a real treat provided by our always gracious hosts. That will be covered in a later post about food consumed while in Japan...

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

So glad to hear (from B)and not the least surprised to hear that you loved Japan. For those of us who are hopelessly sensory-driven, there is no place like it. The asethetics, the style, the attention to detail are, imho, simply off the charts. I guess that's why we keep on going back after all these years! Enjoying you pix and commentary and looking forward to seeing more.

D (who works for B)