Miyazu Japanese Gardens
Atawhai Drive
The Wood, Nelson
Located in the Wood with access from Atawhai Drive.
As you drive into Nelson on the Atawhai side, there's a little slice of Japan offering a quiet place for a stroll or a spot of contemplation.
The Miyazu Garden celebrates Nelson's relationship with its Japanese sister city. As soon as you walk through the gate made from old timber recycled from the port, the street noise is screened out with an immediate feeling of enclosure. Still, reflective ponds, trickling bamboo spouts and melodic cascades enhance the sense of serenity. Doing a circuit of the garden from the entrance you come first to the Dragon Pond, overhung by Jim's Pine, a weathered and windswept 30 year old bonsai.
The peninsula symbolises the Boulder Bank which is a landscape feature similar to Miyazu’s Amanohashidate.
Following the stepping stones towards the pondside pavilion you pass a stone basin used for ritual cleansing before the tea ceremony. The large flat stone beside the deck is called a shoe removing stone.
Crossing the three plank bridge, listen for the sound of the shishi odoshi, a kinetic fountain - originally used in gardens to keep wild animals out.
The main central path crosses over a mountain tarn pond with an alpine cascade.
Shakkei is the art of using scenery beyond the garden to enhance its beauty and increase the perception of size through the use of perspective. Three examples are; the view through the roofed gate to the Tasman Range, to the south to the Grampians and up to the tree covered ridge to the north east.
Taking the path to the Raupo Pond you pass Crane and Tortoise Islands, traditionally named after creatures which are revered in Japan as symbols of longevity. The sturdy bridge between the islands symbolises the friendship between the sister cities.
Further on is the Yen abstract garden with raked sand - kept simple in design to encourage contemplation. The mounds beyond are planted with Japanese cherry trees - their flowering in Japan is an important herald of the spring.
Toilets are discreetly built into mounds to the south of the garden.
Dogs
Dogs must be on-leash.